Mycoplasma synoviae (MS) is an essential pathogenic mycoplasma in poultry worldwide, posing a serious threat to the poultry industry's health. Timely detection is imperative for early diagnosis, prevention, and control of MS infection. Current laboratory methods for MS detection are generally complicated, time-consuming, and require sophisticated equipment. Therefore, a simple and rapid method is urgently needed. This study developed a novel real-time fluorescence-based recombinase-aided amplification (RF-RAA) technique for detecting MS nucleic acids, enabling target gene amplification within 20 min at 39°C. The RF-RAA outcomes are interpretable in 2 modalities: real-time fluorescence monitoring employing a temperature-controlled fluorescence detector or direct visual inspection facilitated by a portable blue light transilluminator. This method exhibits robust specificity, demonstrating no cross-reactivity with various common poultry pathogens, and achieves high sensitivity, detecting as low as 10 copies/μL for the standard plasmid. Seventy-one clinical samples of chicken throat swabs were detected by RF-RAA and real-time fluorescence quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) methods. The diagnostic coincidence rates of qPCR with RF-RAA (fluorescence monitoring) and RF-RAA (visual observation) were determined to be 100% and 97.2% (69/71), respectively. In conclusion, the RF-RAA method developed in this study provides a rapid and visually observable approach for MS detection, offering a novel technique to diagnosing MS infection, especially in resource-limited settings.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- multiple sclerosis
- ms ms
- single molecule
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- energy transfer
- label free
- nucleic acid
- antimicrobial resistance
- public health
- escherichia coli
- high resolution
- crispr cas
- risk assessment
- computed tomography
- sensitive detection
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dna methylation
- metabolic syndrome
- health information
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- copy number
- magnetic resonance
- health promotion