Fabio Cervellione
Skretting Aquaculture Research Centre, Norway
Title: Effect of starvation on hepatopancreas of whiteleg shrimp (Penaeus vannamei) using computer-assisted image analysis on paraffin and frozen sections
Biography
Biography: Fabio Cervellione
Abstract
The hepatopancreas is the main organ of the gastro-intestinal tract in crustaceans and it is routinely assessed by pathologists for signs of disease and health monitoring because it is the site of digestion, nutrient absorption, reserve storage, detoxification, synthesis and secretion of digestive enzymes. The hepatopancreas is mainly composed of 4 different cell types: E-cells, B-cells, F-cells and R-cells. R-cells resemble the absorptive cells of the vertebrate intestine and store mainly lipids and glycogen. Many decapods can survive weeks or even months of total starvation. In the past, a few studies focused on the influence of feeding on hepatopancreas structure but none of them using computed-assisted image analysis. Image analysis is a fast, objective and applicable method for routine screening of high number of samples, both for diagnostic perspectives and research applications. In the present study, whiteleg shrimp (2±1g, C inter-moult stage) were housed individually in glass tanks (27±1°C, pH at 7.8-8.1, and salinity at 20±1gL-1). Three feeding regimes were compared over a 15 days period: fed (5% of body weight/day); starved; and re-fed after 10 days of starvation. Morphological changes caused by starvation were analysed in paraffin sections and frozen sections with computer-assisted image analysis software (Visiopharm®). Hepatopancreatic parameters measured were: total tissue area, lumen area, lipid droplets, F-cells, and infiltration of haemocytes. Effect of starvation on the ultrastructure of the hepatopancreas was also studied by TEM. Application of image analysis on a routine basis will permit health monitoring of the nutritional status in farmed decapods.