Current Issues in Molecular Biology (Aug 2024)

Development of a Multiplex Real-Time PCR to Disambiguate <i>Culicoides sonorensis</i> within <i>Culicoides variipennis</i> Complex, the Proven Vector of Bluetongue and Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease Viruses in North America

  • Sarah-Jo Paquette,
  • Dominic Czekay,
  • Jessica Manalaysay,
  • Tara Furukawa-Stoffer,
  • Aruna Ambagala,
  • Stacey Vigil,
  • Nariman Shahhosseini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cimb46090566
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46, no. 9
pp. 9534 – 9554

Abstract

Read online

Species delimitation of Culicoides complex species can be challenging. Among species within the Culicoides variipennis complex, C. sonorensis is considered the primary vector of bluetongue virus (BTV) and epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus (EHDV) in North America. Morphological identification of C. sonorensis within the C. variipennis complex is laborious, time-consuming, and requires entomology expertise. Therefore, in this study we developed and validated a multiplex real-time PCR for rapid detection and differentiation of C. sonorensis from the two other main cryptic species (C. variipennis and C. occidentalis) within the C. variipennis complex. The assay targets the EF1α gene and has a built-in internal control targeting 18 S. The specificity and the sensitivity of the multiplex real-time PCR were evaluated using morphologically identified reference and field-collected specimens. The multiplex PCR was 100% specific when nucleic acid extracted from C. variipennis, sonorensis, and occidentalis specimens was tested. When nucleic acid extracted from pools of midges was tested, the multiplex PCR was able to detect all three Culicoides species with comparable sensitivity. The multiplex assay, however, failed to detect eight morphologically identified C. sonorensis specimens collected from Alberta in 2014. The EF1α gene sequences of these specimens formed a distinct phylogenetic cluster, amongst those from C. variipennis, sonorensis, and occidentalis, suggesting that they belong to a different species. We hypothesize that those specimens might be C. albertensis, the only other species remaining in the C. variipennis complex with known geographical distribution in North America. We believe that this highly sensitive and specific multiplex real-time PCR assay could be an effective tool for rapid detection and differentiation of C. sonorensis, the known vector of BTV and EHDV, in trap collections in future vector surveillance programs.

Keywords