Summary: | Parasitic and amphizoic amoebae are ubiquitous and can affect a huge variety of hosts, from invertebrates to humans, and fish are not an exception. Most of the relationships between amoebae and fish are based on four different types: ectocommensals, ectoparasites, endocommensals and endoparasites, although the lines between them are not always clear. As ectocommensals, they are located specially on the gills and particularly the amphizoic <i>Neoparamoeba perurans</i> is the most relevant species, being a real pathogenic parasite in farmed salmon. It causes amoebic gill disease, which causes a progressive hyperplasia of epithelial cells in the gill filaments and lamellae. Nodular gill disease is its analogue in freshwater fish but the causative agent is still not clear, although several amoebae have been identified associated to the lesions. Other species have been described in different fish species, affecting not only gills but also other organs, even internal ones. In some cases, species of the genera <i>Naegleria</i> or <i>Acanthamoeba</i>, which also contain pathogenic species affecting humans, are usually described affecting freshwater fish species. As endocommensals, <i>Entamoebae</i> species have been described in the digestive tract of freshwater and marine fish species, but <i>Endolimax nana</i> can reach other organs and cause systemic infections in farmed <i>Solea senegalensis</i>. Other systemic infections caused by amoebae are usually described in wild fish, although in most cases these are isolated cases without clinical signs or significance.
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