Bovine mastitis is an inflammation of the mammary gland, and it is the most common infectious disease in dairy cattle. Mastitis reduces milk yield and quality, costing dairy farmers millions of dollars each year. The aim of this study was to develop a point-of-need test for identifying mastitis pathogens that is field portable, cost-effective and can be used with minimal training. Using a proprietary polymer-based milk sample preparation method to rapidly extract pathogen DNA in milk samples, we demonstrated quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (qPCR) assays for six common bovine bacterial mastitis pathogens: Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus agalactiae, Streptococcus dysgalactiae, Streptococcus uberis, Mycoplasma bovis and Escherichia coli. We also implemented this sample preparation method on a prototype point-of-need system in a proof-of-concept field trial to evaluate user experience. Importantly, the protype system enabled a sample-to-result turnaround time of within 70 min to quantitatively detect all six target pathogens. The key advantage of our point-of-need prototype system is being culture-independent yet providing automated milk sample preparation for molecular identification of key mastitis pathogens by non-expert users. Our point-of-need prototype system showed a good correlation to laboratory-based qPCR for target pathogen detection outcomes, thus potentially removing the need for milk samples to be transported off-site for laboratory testing. Above all, we successfully achieved our objective of developing a point-of-need biosensor technology for mastitis and increased its readiness level with industry partners towards technology commercialization.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.talanta.2024.126424DOI Listing

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