RPB0184

Pathogen Description

Target Pathogen Pathogen Name NCBI Taxonomy ID Order Family Genus Species Pathogen type
Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (ATCC 19698) Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis 1074454 Corynebacteriales Mycobacteriaceae Mycobacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis Bacterium

Primer Description

Primer Name Sequence(5'-3') Length(bp) Primer Final Concentration(μM) GC Content(%) Predicted Melting Temperature(℃) Molecular Weight(g/moles) Positions in GenBank accession number
F CGTGGACGCCGGTAAGGCCGACCATTACTGCATGG 35 10 μM 62.9 73.27 10798.03 182–405
R CGCCGCAATCAACTCCAGCAGCGCGGCCTC 30 10 μM 70 75.43 9082.93 182–405
P ACGCCGGTAAGGCCGACCATTACTGCATGGTQTFTAACGACGACGCGCA 49 10 μM 57.4 76.01 14458.42 182–405

Gene Description

Target Gene GenBank ID
IS900 gene AF416985.1

Assay Description

Application Assay Primer Designing Software Reaction Time(min) Assay Temperature(℃) Readout System(s) Limit of Detection(LoD) Sensitivity(%) Specificity(%)
\ RPA \ 15 42 \ 500 fg/reaction 89.5 100

Publication Description

Year of Publication Title Author(s) Journal PMID DOI
2016 Development of a Recombinase Polymerase Amplification Assay for Rapid Detection of the Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis Sören Hansen, Jenny Schäfer, Kim Fechner, Claus-Peter Czerny, and Ahmed Abd El Wahed PLoS One 27992571 10.1371/journal.pone.0168733

Development of a Recombinase Polymerase Amplification Assay for Rapid Detection of the Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis

Author(s):

Sören Hansen, Jenny Schäfer, Kim Fechner, Claus-Peter Czerny, and Ahmed Abd El Wahed

Journal:

PLoS One

Year:

2016

Abstract:

Background The detection of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) infections in ruminants is crucial to control spread among animals and to humans. Cultivation of MAP is seen as the gold standard for detection, although it is very time consuming and labour intensive. In addition, several PCR assays have been developed to detect MAP in around 90 minutes, but these assays required highly sophisticated equipment as well as lengthy and complicated procedure. Methodology/Principal Findings In this study, we have developed a rapid assay for the detection of MAP based on the recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) assay targeting a MAP specific region, the IS900 gene. The detection limit was 16 DNA molecules in 15 minutes as determined by the probit analysis on eight runs of the plasmid standard. Cross reactivity with other mycobacterial and environmentally associated bacterial strains was not observed. The clinical performance of the MAP RPA assay was tested using 48 MAP-positive and 20 MAP-negative blood, sperm, faecal and tissue samples. All results were compared with reads of a highly sensitive real-time PCR assay. The specificity of the MAP RPA assay was 100%, while the sensitivity was 89.5%. Conclusions/Significance The RPA assay is quicker and much easier to handle than real-time PCR. All RPA reagents were cold-chain independent. Moreover, combining RPA assay with a simple extraction protocol will maximize its use at point of need for rapid detection of MAP.