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Single-tube Multiplex Nested PCR System for Efficient Detection of Pathogenic Microorganisms in SPF Rodents

Authors :
Xu, Wang Jie
Pan, Ya Jun
Li, Wei Jie
Peng, Li Na
Liang, Dong Li
Zhang, Man
Ding, Wei
Wang, Zhao Xia
Source :
J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Association for Laboratory Animal Science, 2022.

Abstract

PCR testing is increasingly important for microbial control in SPF facilities. However, most current PCR methods are timeconsuming and require compromise between high sensitivity and high multiplexing. We developed a one-tube multiplex nested PCR strategy (MN-PCR) for simultaneous direct (that is, without culturing) detection of multiple pathogens. We first aligned sequences for the 16S rDNA genes of selected target bacteria and a panel of closely related organisms. From these data, we designed a pair of universal primers and multiple sets of species-specific PCR primers to amplify the target sequences; the universal primers were modified to include various degenerate bases and locked nucleic acids. In a single tube, 16S rDNA sequences were amplified by using the nested PCR primers under high temperature (that is, above 65°C) during the first stage of the MN-PCR procedure, when the target-species–specific PCR primers do not support amplification due to their short length. In addition, the concentration of the nested PCR primers during the first stage was adjusted to ensure that they were consumed and did not yield visible bands themselves. During the second stage, the enriched 16S rDNA sequences then served as templates for amplification of the species-specific fragments by using the multiple PCR primers at low annealing temperatures (that is, below 60°C). The results showed that our MN-PCR method detected as little as 1 fg of target bacterial DNA in a 20-μL reaction volume, whereas conventional multiplex PCR detected a minimum of 1 pg only. Compared with traditional multiplex PCR assays, our MN-PCR system is an effective and efficient culture-free process.

Details

ISSN :
15596109
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a8572b65f9961e11a356a95b892705b4