posted on 2006-11-15, 00:00authored byEric S. Rosenblum, Ronald S. Tjeerdema, Mark R. Viant
The antibiotic oxytetracycline (OTC) has shown immense
promise for combating the causative agent of Withering
syndrome (WS), a Rickettsia-like procaryote (WS-RLP) that
has severely impacted California abalone (Haliotis spp.)
populations. Using histology and nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR) spectroscopy based metabolomics, the effects of
OTC treatments (10, 20, or 30 days) on WS-RLP infected
abalone in seawater temperatures of 13.4 ± 1.2 and
17.3 ± 1.3 °C were investigated over 160 days. The highly
efficacious nature of OTC in combating WS-RLP at both
temperatures was demonstrated by histology. Metabolomics
revealed, however, that the most significant metabolic
changes in foot muscle depended upon posttreatment
duration, irrespective of treatment and temperature. This
was quite unexpected and would have been overlooked using
histology alone. Metabolic changes in all animals at
both temperatures included decreased levels of amino
acids and carbohydrates and elevated taurine, glycine-betaine, and homarine. Subtle metabolic differences between
OTC-treated and untreated abalone were observed at
17.3 °C only. These findings provide clear evidence that
OTC eradicates WS-RLP which in turn reduces the metabolic
decay associated with WS at elevated seawater temperature.
Furthermore, this study documents the sequential
metabolic changes that occur during pre-clinical WS, and
demonstrates the application of metabolic phenotyping
for understanding environmental effects on host−pathogen−drug interactions.