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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Development of a multiplex real-time PCR for contagious agalactia diagnosis in small ruminants.

Journal:
Journal of microbiological methods
Year:
2012
Authors:
Becker, Claire A M et al.
Affiliation:
Universit&#xe9 · France

Plain-English summary

Contagious agalactia is a serious disease that affects small farm animals like sheep and goats, causing problems such as mastitis (inflammation of the mammary gland), pneumonia, arthritis, and more. Researchers have developed a new test called multiplex real-time PCR that can quickly identify four different bacteria responsible for this disease at the same time. This test is designed to be very sensitive, meaning it can detect even small amounts of the bacteria, and it can tell one type apart from the others. While the test still needs to be evaluated with actual samples from sick animals, the early results show it could be very effective for diagnosing this disease on a larger scale.

Abstract

Contagious agalactia is an important disease worldwide that affects small ruminants. Clinical manifestations vary from mastitis, pneumonia, arthritis and keratoconjunctivitis to septicemia. Four mycoplasmal etiological agents have been identified: Mycoplasma (M.) agalactiae, M. mycoides subsp. capri, M. capricolum subsp. capricolum and M. putrefaciens. The current procedure for direct diagnosis, recommended by the World Organization for Animal Health, involves the isolation of one or several causative agents from clinical specimens and further time-consuming identification steps. The present study reports the development of a new multiplex real-time PCR (including an internal positive control) that detects all four pathogens simultaneously and distinguishes M. agalactiae from the others. First, intra- and inter-species polymorphisms of the two target house-keeping genes, namely polC and fusA, were analyzed to design primers and probes adapted to the diversity of currently circulating strains. The specificity and the sensitivity of the assay were then challenged and the limit of detection was found to be as low as 6 to 12 copies of the target genes. The assay requires further assessment on clinical specimens but its performances (notably low intra- and inter-assay variability) are already very promising for use in large-scale diagnosis and prophylactic surveys of contagious agalactia.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22579581/