Christopher J Coates

Christopher J Coates
University of Galway | NUI Galway

BSc, Ph.D, PGCHE, FHEA
Invertebrate (shellfish, insect) welfare, infection, immunity, toxicology, and responses to environmental disturbances

About

106
Publications
37,961
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1,528
Citations
Citations since 2017
86 Research Items
1335 Citations
20172018201920202021202220230100200300
20172018201920202021202220230100200300
20172018201920202021202220230100200300
20172018201920202021202220230100200300
Introduction
Current research: -Interrogating the cellular and humoral responses of shellfish innate immunity to biotic and abiotic assault -Investigating the conversion of haemocyanin into an immune factor in invertebrates -Development of insect larvae as alternative mini-host models

Publications

Publications (106)
Article
It is a difficult task to describe what constitutes a ‘healthy’ shellfish (e.g., crustacean, bivalve). Visible defects such as discolouration, missing limbs or spines, fouling, lesions, and exoskeletal fractures can be indicative of underlying issues, senescence, or a ‘stressed’ animal. The absence of such symptoms is not evidence of a disease-free...
Book
Full-text available
Many invertebrates are serious pests of agriculture (e.g. mites and locusts), vectors of disease (e.g. mosquitoes and aquatic snails) and venomous (e.g. scorpions), whilst others are beneficial to humans as pollinators, food sources, and detritivores. Despite their obvious ecological, medical, and economic importance, this is the first comprehensiv...
Article
Full-text available
Host, pathogen, and environment are determinants of the disease triangle, the latter being a key driver of disease outcomes and persistence within a community. The dinoflagellate genus Hematodinium is detrimental to crustaceans globally – considered to suppress the innate defences of hosts, making them more susceptible to co-infections. Evidence su...
Article
Full-text available
Oxygen bioavailability is declining in aquatic systems worldwide as a result of climate change and other anthropogenicstressors. For aquatic organisms, the consequences are poorly known but are likely to reflect both direct effects of declining oxygen bioavailability and interactions between oxygen and other stressors, including two—warming and aci...
Article
Full-text available
The term shell disease subsumes a number of debilitating conditions affecting the outer integument (the carapace) of decapod crustaceans, such as lobsters and crabs. Herein, we seek to find commonality in the aetiology and pathology of such conditions, and those cases that result in the progressive erosion of the cuticle through to the visceral tis...
Article
Full-text available
Larvae of the greater wax moth Galleria mellonella are common pests of beehives and commercial apiaries, and in more applied settings, these insects act as alternative in vivo bioassays to rodents for studying microbial virulence, antibiotic development, and toxicology. In the current study, our aim was to assess the putative adverse effects of bac...
Article
Two populations of the invasive slipper limpet Crepidula fornicata were sampled in Swansea Bay and Milford Haven, Wales, U.K., to determine the presence of putative pathogens and parasites known to affect co-located commercially important shellfish (e.g., oysters). A multi-resource screen, including molecular and histological diagnoses were used to...
Article
Full-text available
Epizootiologists recurrently encounter symbionts and pathobionts in the haemolymph (blood equivalent) of shellfish. One such group is the dinoflagellate genus Hematodinium, which contains several species that cause debilitating disease in decapod crustaceans. The shore crab Carcinus maenas acts as a mobile reservoir of microparasites, including Hem...
Article
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is one of the most common entomopathogenic bacteria used as a biopesticide, and source of endotoxin genes for generating insect-resistant transgenic plants. The mechanisms underpinning an insect's susceptibility or resistance to B. thuringiensis are diverse. The bacterial lifecycle does not end with the death of a host,...
Article
Full-text available
For humans, acute and chronic overexposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation can cause tissue damage in the form of sunburn and promote cancer(s). The immune-modulating properties of UV radiation and health-related consequences are not well known. Herein, we used the larvae of the wax moth (Galleria mellonella) to determine UV-driven changes in cellula...
Article
Symsagittifera roscoffensis, an Acoel flatworm that lives within the intertidal zone, was first discovered over a century ago as a "plant animal" due to its symbiotic relationship with the alga Tetraselmis convolutae. Although commonly used as a model organism in biomedical research, there is little information regarding its life history or how env...
Preprint
Full-text available
For humans, acute and chronic overexposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation can cause tissue damage in the form of sunburn and promote cancer(s). The immune-modulating properties of UV radiation and health-related consequences are not well known. Herein, we used the larvae of the wax moth (Galleria mellonella) to determine UV-driven changes in cellula...
Preprint
Larvae of the greater wax moth Galleria mellonella are common pests of beehives and commercial apiaries, and in more applied settings, these insects act as alternative in vivo bioassays to rodents for studying microbial virulence, antibiotic development, and toxicology. In the current study, our overall aim was to assess the putative adverse effect...
Article
Full-text available
Predictions for climate change – to lesser and greater extents – reveal a common scenario in which marine waters are characterised by a deadly trio of stressors: higher temperatures, lower oxygen levels, and acidification. Ectothermic taxa that inhabit coastal waters, such as shellfish, are vulnerable to rapid and prolonged environmental disturbanc...
Article
Full-text available
A large knowledge gap exists regarding the disease profile and pathologic condition of the invasive, slipper limpet Crepidula fornicata. To help address this, we performed a year-long health survey at two sites in South Wales, UK – subtidal Swansea Bay and intertidal Milford Haven. In total, 1,800 limpets were screened systematically for haemolymph...
Article
Full-text available
The farming of decapod crustaceans is a key economic driver in many countries with production reaching around 9.4 million tonnes (USD 69.3 billion) in 2018. These efforts are currently dominated by the farming of Pacific whiteleg shrimp, Penaeus vannamei, which translates into approximately 167 billion farmed P. vannamei being harvested annually. F...
Article
The Neoproterozoic included changes in oceanic redox conditions, the configuration of continents and climate, extreme ice ages (Sturtian and Marinoan), and the rise of complex life forms. A much-debated topic in geobiology concerns the influence of atmospheric oxygenation on Earth and the origin and diversification of animal lineages, with the most...
Article
Full-text available
Invasion and spread of alien species can drive ecosystem changes, such as, the dynamics of infectious diseases. The non-native, marine gastropod Crepidula fornicata has become established across European coastlines over the last century but there remains little insight on its disease carrying capacity and potential role as a source/sink of parasite...
Article
Full-text available
Abstract: Fungal volatile organic compounds (VOCs) represent promising candidates for biopesticide fumigants to control crop pests and pathogens. Herein, VOCs produced using three strains of the ento�mopathogenic fungus Metarhizium brunneum were identified via GC-MS and screened for antimicrobial activity. The VOC profiles varied with fungal strain...
Chapter
Full-text available
Textbooks on immunology rarely spend more than a few pages describing the principles of invertebrate immunology. Coming away from these often gives the reader the impression that this immune system is simple and non-specific in nature yet with over 1.3 million extant species of invertebrates, there is inevitably a great diversity of strategies to d...
Chapter
Most often, disease is considered the outcome of a collision between a pathogenic agent and a susceptible host. Cellular and tissue degradation are pathognomonic of microbial proliferation – but the aetiology of non-communicable disease or stress are difficult to outline and have received much less coverage. Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are tho...
Chapter
The study of diseased invertebrates dates back to ancient times. Aristotle in his Historia Animalium used his observational ability to describe a disease of bees; presumably those used by the ancient Greeks to produce honey. Observation, be it with the naked eye or with the assistance of microscopes, still remains a fundamental part of any disease...
Chapter
Chelicerates represent one of the oldest and second most speciose groups within the Phylum Arthropoda. Often referred to as ‘living fossils’, extant chelicerates inhabit terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Spiders, scorpions, ticks and mites are usually mistaken for insects, just as horseshoe crabs are misidentified as crustaceans. The biological a...
Article
Full-text available
Probiotic use in aquaculture settings can be an approach for disease control and dietary supplementation. We assessed the antagonistic effect of culture supernatants of lactic acid bacteria on the growth of known shrimp pathogens, Vibrio (Listonella) anguillarum, Vibrio alginolyticus and V. harveyi, using a quantitative microplate bioassay. Superna...
Article
Full-text available
While most crab production for human consumption worldwide comes from capture fisheries, there is increasing production of selected species using aquaculture-based methods. This is both for the purpose of stock replacement and direct yield for human consumption. Disease has limited the ability to produce larval crabs in commercial hatcheries and th...
Preprint
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is one of the most common entomopathogenic bacteria used as a biopesticide, and source of endotoxin genes for generating insect-resistant transgenic plants. The mechanisms underpinning an insect’s susceptibility or resistance to B. thuringiensis are diverse. The bacterial lifecycle does not end with the death of a host,...
Preprint
Full-text available
A large knowledge gap exists regarding the disease profile and pathologic condition of the invasive, non-native, slipper limpet Crepidula fornicata. To help address this, we performed a yearlong health survey across two sites in South Wales UK, subtidal Swansea Bay and intertidal Milford Haven. In total, 1,800 limpets were screened systematically f...
Article
Full-text available
Phenolic compounds are chemical precursor building blocks of soil organic matter. Their occurrence can be inhibitory to certain enzymes present in soil, thereby influencing the rate of decomposition of soil organic matter. Microbe-derived phenoloxidases (laccases) are extracellular enzymes capable of degrading recalcitrant polyphenolic compounds. I...
Article
Full-text available
The insect integument (exoskeleton) is an effective physiochemical barrier that limits disease-causing agents to a few portals of entry, including the gastrointestinal and reproductive tracts. The bacterial biopesticide Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) enters the insect host via the mouth and must thwart gut-based defences to make its way into the body...
Article
Full-text available
Diarrhetic shellfish-poisoning (DSP) toxins such as okadaic acid and dinophysistoxins harm the human gastrointestinal tract, and therefore, their levels are regulated to an upper limit of 160 μg per kg tissue to protect consumers. Rodents are used routinely for risk assessment and studies concerning mechanisms of toxicity, but there is a general mo...
Article
Full-text available
The biological toolkits for aerobic respiration were critical for the rise and diversification of animals. Aerobic life forms generate ATP through the oxidation of organic molecules in a process known as the Krebs’ Cycle, where the enzyme isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) regulates the cycle's turnover rate. Evolutionary reconstructions and molecular...
Article
Preparations of the fungus Cordyceps sinensis and bovine colostrum are considered nutraceuticals due to their anti-inflammatory, repair and gut alimentation properties in mammalian models. To reduce the reliance on rodents in routine experimentation, we gauged the capacity of nutraceuticals to alleviate gastric damage in an insect surrogate, Galler...
Poster
Full-text available
The Neoproterozoic included changes in oceanic redox conditions, the configuration of continents and climate, extreme ice ages (Sturtian and Marinoan), and the rise of complex life forms. A much-debated topic in geobiology is related to the influence of atmospheric oxygenation on Earth and the origin and diversification of animal lineages, with the...
Preprint
Full-text available
Host, pathogen, and environment are determinants of the disease triangle, the latter being a key driver of disease outcomes and persistence within a community. The dinoflagellate genus Hematodinium is detrimental to crustaceans globally – considered to suppress the innate defences of hosts, making them more susceptible to co-infections. Evidence su...
Article
The co-evolutionary arms race between disease-causing agents and their insect victims is ancient and complex – leading to the development of specialised attack and defence strategies. Among such strategies is the capacity of fungal and oomycete pathogens to deploy degradative enzymes, notably proteases, to facilitate infection directly across the i...
Article
Full-text available
Adhesins facilitate bacterial colonization and invasion of host tissues and are considered virulence factors, but their impact on immune-mediated damage as a driver of pathogenesis remains unclear. Yersinia pseudotuberculosis encodes for a multivalent adhesion molecule (MAM), a mammalian cell entry (MCE) family protein and adhesin. MAMs are widespr...
Article
Full-text available
Animals depend on the sequential oxidation of organic molecules to survive; thus, oxygen-carrying/transporting proteins play a fundamental role in aerobic metabolism. Globins are the most common and widespread group of respiratory proteins. They can be divided into three types: circulating intracellular, non-circulating intracellular, and extracell...
Article
Full-text available
Animals depend on the sequential oxidation of organic molecules to survive; thus, oxygen-carrying/transporting proteins play a fundamental role in aerobic metabolism. Globins are the most common and widespread group of respiratory proteins. They can be divided into three types: circulating intracellular, non-circulating intracellular, and extracell...
Article
Full-text available
This study provides a morphological and phylogenetic characterization of two novel species of the order Haplosporida (Haplosporidium carcini n. sp., and H. cranc n. sp.) infecting the common shore crab Carcinus maenas collected at one location in Swansea Bay, South Wales, UK. Both parasites were observed in the haemolymph, gills and hepatopancreas....
Article
Full-text available
There is a paucity of knowledge regarding the diversity and impact(s) of disease-causing fungi in marine animals, especially shellfish. In efforts to address this knowledge gap for the shore crab Carcinus maenas, a year-long disease screen was carried out across two sites in Swansea Bay (Wales, UK) with a view to characterising putative fungal infe...
Article
The slipper limpet Crepidula fornicata is an invasive, non-native, marine species found throughout the coastal waters of southern England and Wales, UK. These limpets are considered to blight commercial shellfish banks, notably oysters, yet little is known about their disease-carrying capacity or their immunobiology. To address the latter, we isola...
Article
Agaricus bisporus is a commercial mushroom crop susceptible to a disease caused by a complex of viruses known collectively as mushroom virus X (MVX). Symptoms of MVX include bare patches and mushroom cap discolouration (browning) in the fruiting bodies, phenotypes associated with the viruses AbV6 and AbV16, respectively. Limited understanding exist...
Chapter
The copper-containing hemocyanins are proteins responsible for the binding, transportation and storage of dioxygen within the blood (hemolymph) of many invertebrates. Several additional functions have been attributed to both arthropod and molluscan hemocyanins, including (but not limited to) enzymatic activity (namely phenoloxidase), hormone transp...
Chapter
There are three broad groups of oxygen-transport proteins found in the haemolymph (blood) of invertebrates, namely the hemocyanins, the hemerythrins and the globins. Both hemerythrins and extracellular globins are iron-based proteins that are understudied when compared to the copper-containing hemocyanins. Recent evidence suggests that hemerythrins...
Article
Sacculina carcini is a common parasite of the European shore crab, Carcinus maenas. Following successful penetration of the host, numerous rootlets are formed that permeate through the hosts' tissues. Ultimately, these form an externa that houses the developing nauplii larvae of the parasite. Most studies have quantified levels of infection by coun...
Article
Full-text available
Mikrocytids are a widespread but rather neglected group of parasites of aquatic invertebrates. One such parasite is Paramikrocytos canceri—discovered to infect the antennal gland of the juvenile edible crab, Cancer pagurus, taken from several intertidal sites across the United Kingdom. To determine if this parasite is also present in other species...
Article
Full-text available
In order for entomopathogenic fungi to colonise an insect host, they must first attach to, and penetrate, the cuticle layers of the integument. Herein, we explored the interactions between the fungal pathogen Metarhizium brunneum ARSEF 4556 and two immunologically distinct morphs, melanic (M) and non-melanic (NM), of the greater wax moth Galleria m...
Article
Full-text available
Abstract Background The parasitic dinoflagellates of the genus Hematodinium represent the causative agent of so-called bitter or pink crab disease in a broad range of shellfish taxa. Outbreaks of Hematodinium-associated disease can devastate local fishing and aquaculture efforts. The goal of our study was to examine the potential role of the common...
Article
Full-text available
Indomethacin is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug that causes gastric ulceration and increased 'leakiness' in rat models, and is used routinely as a toxicology assay to screen novel compounds for repair and restitution properties. We set out to establish conditions for indomethacin-induced gut damage in wax-moth (Galleria mellonella) larvae wi...
Article
Full-text available
The polyether toxin, okadaic acid, causes diarrhetic shellfish poisoning in humans. Despite extensive research into its cellular targets using rodent models, we know little about its putative effect(s) on innate immunity. We inoculated larvae of the greater waxmoth, Galleria mellonella, with physiologically relevant doses of okadaic acid by direct...
Article
Full-text available
Decapod crustaceans, such as those from the Homarus genus, are key benthic representatives that support very valuable fishing and aquaculture industries. Those commercially caught, such as the European lobster (H. gammarus) can be stored in live facilities for short (a few days) to long periods (up to 6 months) before being traded. Conditions in ca...
Article
Banana bunchy top virus (BBTV) poses a serious danger to banana crops worldwide. BBTV-encoded protein B4 is a determinant of pathogenicity. However, the relevant molecular mechanisms underlying its effects remain unknown. In this study, we found that a functional peptide could be liberated from protein B4, likely via proteolytic processing. Site-di...