Weiwei Wang , Yan Zhang , Wenbo Zuo , Yuanzheng Qiao , Jun Shi , Jianni Huang , Teng Huang , Tianchao Wei , Meilan Mo , Xiumiao He , Ping Wei
{"title":"Rapid identification, pathotyping and quantification of infectious bursal disease virus by high-resolution melting curve quantitative reverse transcription PCR analysis: An innovative technology well-suited for real-time large-scale epidemiological surveillance","authors":"Weiwei Wang , Yan Zhang , Wenbo Zuo , Yuanzheng Qiao , Jun Shi , Jianni Huang , Teng Huang , Tianchao Wei , Meilan Mo , Xiumiao He , Ping Wei","doi":"10.1016/j.psj.2024.104440","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>With the virus continuing to evolve, very virulent IBDV (vvIBDV) and novel variant IBDV (nvIBDV) have become the predominant epidemic strains in China, exacerbated by the widespread use of attenuated vaccine strains (attIBDV), making a complex infection situation of IBDV in the field. Therefore, developing a rapid and accurate high-resolution melting curve quantitative reverse transcription PCR (HRM-qRT-PCR) for the identification and pathotyping of IBDV is crucial for clinical monitoring and disease control. Extensive data analysis and genome-screening of the three dominant IBDV pathotypes identified a specific region (nucleotides 2450–2603 in segment A) with distinct GC content as the detection target. Experimental testing of HRM-qRT-PCR revealed distinct melting curves and high sensitivity, with the detection limits of 61.2 copies/μL, 61.1 copies/μL and 67.5 copies/μL for vvIBDV, nvIBDV and attIBDV, respectively. The method exhibited excellent specificity, with no inter-genotypes cross-reactivity among the three pathotypes and no reactivity to other common avian pathogens. Applied to samples with double and triple co-infections of different IBDV pathotypes, the method displayed specific melting peaks corresponding to the viruses present in the samples, with an accuracy rate of 100 %. This method precisely identifies and differentiates all the single or co-infected samples, generating distinct peaks corresponding to the Tm values of each virus pathotype in traditional melting curve plots. Furthermore, the method overcomes the limitations of traditional pathotyping methods, requiring only one reaction to achieve rapid viral pathotyping and facilitating quantitative analysis of viruses within the samples. This study introduces an innovative HRM-qRT-PCR method, offering new technology to rapid and accurate identification, pathotyping and quantification of vvIBDV, nvIBDV, and attIBDV. With strong discriminatory power, user-friendliness and a short processing time, this method is highly attractive for the rapid IBDV pathotyping in real-time large-scale epidemiological surveillance during outbreaks.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":20459,"journal":{"name":"Poultry Science","volume":"103 12","pages":"Article 104440"},"PeriodicalIF":3.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Poultry Science","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579124010186","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
With the virus continuing to evolve, very virulent IBDV (vvIBDV) and novel variant IBDV (nvIBDV) have become the predominant epidemic strains in China, exacerbated by the widespread use of attenuated vaccine strains (attIBDV), making a complex infection situation of IBDV in the field. Therefore, developing a rapid and accurate high-resolution melting curve quantitative reverse transcription PCR (HRM-qRT-PCR) for the identification and pathotyping of IBDV is crucial for clinical monitoring and disease control. Extensive data analysis and genome-screening of the three dominant IBDV pathotypes identified a specific region (nucleotides 2450–2603 in segment A) with distinct GC content as the detection target. Experimental testing of HRM-qRT-PCR revealed distinct melting curves and high sensitivity, with the detection limits of 61.2 copies/μL, 61.1 copies/μL and 67.5 copies/μL for vvIBDV, nvIBDV and attIBDV, respectively. The method exhibited excellent specificity, with no inter-genotypes cross-reactivity among the three pathotypes and no reactivity to other common avian pathogens. Applied to samples with double and triple co-infections of different IBDV pathotypes, the method displayed specific melting peaks corresponding to the viruses present in the samples, with an accuracy rate of 100 %. This method precisely identifies and differentiates all the single or co-infected samples, generating distinct peaks corresponding to the Tm values of each virus pathotype in traditional melting curve plots. Furthermore, the method overcomes the limitations of traditional pathotyping methods, requiring only one reaction to achieve rapid viral pathotyping and facilitating quantitative analysis of viruses within the samples. This study introduces an innovative HRM-qRT-PCR method, offering new technology to rapid and accurate identification, pathotyping and quantification of vvIBDV, nvIBDV, and attIBDV. With strong discriminatory power, user-friendliness and a short processing time, this method is highly attractive for the rapid IBDV pathotyping in real-time large-scale epidemiological surveillance during outbreaks.
期刊介绍:
First self-published in 1921, Poultry Science is an internationally renowned monthly journal, known as the authoritative source for a broad range of poultry information and high-caliber research. The journal plays a pivotal role in the dissemination of preeminent poultry-related knowledge across all disciplines. As of January 2020, Poultry Science will become an Open Access journal with no subscription charges, meaning authors who publish here can make their research immediately, permanently, and freely accessible worldwide while retaining copyright to their work. Papers submitted for publication after October 1, 2019 will be published as Open Access papers.
An international journal, Poultry Science publishes original papers, research notes, symposium papers, and reviews of basic science as applied to poultry. This authoritative source of poultry information is consistently ranked by ISI Impact Factor as one of the top 10 agriculture, dairy and animal science journals to deliver high-caliber research. Currently it is the highest-ranked (by Impact Factor and Eigenfactor) journal dedicated to publishing poultry research. Subject areas include breeding, genetics, education, production, management, environment, health, behavior, welfare, immunology, molecular biology, metabolism, nutrition, physiology, reproduction, processing, and products.