Poultry Science (Aug 2024)

A novel high sensitive, specificity duplex enzyme-activated differentiating probes PCR method for the SNP detection and differentiation of MS-H vaccine strains from wild-type Mycoplasma synoviae strains

  • Ruidong Liu,
  • Qijie Lin,
  • Qianyi Cai,
  • Yucen Liang,
  • Xiaozhen Xu,
  • Qiuyan Chen,
  • Chenggang Xu,
  • Haixia Liu,
  • Ming Liao,
  • Jianmin Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 103, no. 8
p. 103874

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: Mycoplasma synoviae (MS) is a contagious pathogen that poses a significant threat to the poultry industry. Detection plays an important role in the prevention and control of MS, particularly in differentiating between wild-type MS and live attenuated vaccine strains for vaccination selection and culling of animals with wild-type only. The live attenuated ts+ vaccine strain MS-H is recognized as the most effective and widely used vaccine. In this study, we have developed a method called double enzyme-activated differentiation probes PCR (DEA-probes PCR) for the differentiation of MS-H vaccine strain from wild-type strain by targeting the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) of the 367th nucleotide in the Obg gene sequence. We developed 2 modified probes with the ribonucleotide insert. When the probe perfectly complements with the target, the ribonuclease H2 (RNase H2) will cleave the ribonucleotide, resulting in the generation of fluorescent signal. With a detection limit of 5.8 copies/µL, the DEA-probes PCR method demonstrates 100% specificity in distinguishing wild-type MS from MS-H strains in 1 h. The method demonstrated great performance in real application of 100 superior palate cleft swab samples from chickens in poultry farms. Twenty-eight samples were detected as MS positive, consistent with the results of the Chinese industry standard method. Additionally, our method was able to distinguish 19 wild-type MS strains from 9 MS-H vaccine strains. The DEA-probes PCR method is rapid, specific and sensitive for SNP detection, overcoming the misidentification in MS detection and differentiation. It can be also applied to the differentiation of infected from vaccinated animals (DIVA) for other pathogens.

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