Frontiers in Veterinary Science (Feb 2024)

Rapid detection of high consequence and emerging viral pathogens in pigs

  • Alison C. Neujahr,
  • Duan S. Loy,
  • John Dustin Loy,
  • Bruce W. Brodersen,
  • Samodha C. Fernando,
  • Samodha C. Fernando,
  • Samodha C. Fernando

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2024.1341783
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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IntroductionAn increasing emergence of novel animal pathogens has been observed over the last decade. Viruses are a major contributor to the increased emergence and therefore, veterinary surveillance and testing procedures are greatly needed to rapidly and accurately detect high-consequence animal diseases such as Foot and Mouth Disease, Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, Classical Swine Fever, and African Swine Fever. The major detection methods for such diseases include real-time PCR assays and pathogen-specific antibodies among others. However, due to genetic drift or -shift in virus genomes, failure to detect such pathogens is a risk with devastating consequences. Additionally, the emergence of novel pathogens with no prior knowledge requires non-biased detection methods for discovery.MethodsUtilizing enrichment techniques coupled with Oxford Nanopore Technologies MinION™ sequencing platform, we developed a sample processing and analysis pipeline to identify DNA and RNA viruses and bacterial pathogens from clinical samples.Results and discussionThe sample processing and analysis pipeline developed allows the identification of both DNA and RNA viruses and bacterial pathogens simultaneously from a single tissue sample and provides results in less than 12 h. Preliminary evaluation of this method using surrogate viruses in different matrices and using clinical samples from animals with unknown disease causality, we demonstrate that this method can be used to simultaneously detect pathogens from multiple domains of life simultaneously with high confidence.

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