Improved molecular detection of with a duplex real-time PCR assay in the diagnosis of Potomac horse fever.

J Vet Diagn Invest

Pennsylvania Veterinary Laboratory, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Harrisburg, PA, USA.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • An obligate intracellular bacterium is responsible for Potomac horse fever (PHF), and diagnosis involves detecting antibodies, isolating the bacterium, or using a PCR assay to find its DNA.
  • A new duplex real-time PCR assay was developed by adding primers and probes, targeting two gene locations to enhance detection for diagnosing PHF in horses.
  • The modified assay, tested on samples from 56 horses, showed reliable detection without cross-reacting with common horse pathogens, but some fecal samples yielded false positives when only tested for one of the detected gene targets.

Article Abstract

, an obligate intracellular bacterium, is the causative agent of Potomac horse fever (PHF). Diagnosis of PHF is based on demonstration of serum antibodies, isolation of , and/or detection of nucleic acid by a PCR assay. An existing real-time PCR assay targeting the 16S rRNA has been validated using blood samples from horses with colitis, and snails; to our knowledge, the performance of the assay for other sample types has not been reported. We describe here a modification of the 16S rRNA gene assay by the addition of a set of primers and probe targeting the gene to form a duplex assay. We validated the new assay using diagnostic specimens from 56 horses with suspected PHF. The assay consistently detected down to 5 copies of synthetic targets, and did not show any cross-reaction with common equine enteric pathogens. Although we did not establish the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of the duplex assay, results for both gene targets were in complete agreement, with the exception of 4 fecal samples that tested positive for the 16S rRNA gene only. Further analysis indicated that testing of fecal samples using our 16S rRNA gene assay alone can produce a false-positive result.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9751466PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10406387221135184DOI Listing

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