TREMATODE SPECIES DETECTION AND QUANTIFICATION BY ENVIRONMENTAL DNA-qPCR ASSAY IN LAKE CHANY, RUSSIA.
Janelle Laura J GacadNatalia I YurlovaShoko Tanabe-HosoiMisako UrabePublished in: The Journal of parasitology (2024)
Environmental DNA (eDNA) surveys promise to be a sensitive and powerful tool for the detection of trematodes. This can contribute to the limited studies on trematode ecology, specifically in aquatic ecosystems. Here, we developed species-specific primer and probe sets for Moliniella anceps, Opisthioglyphe ranae, and Plagiorchis multiglandularis cercariae and applied a novel eDNA qPCR assay to detect larval trematodes quantitatively. We evaluated the effectiveness of the assays using filtered lake water samples collected from different sites of Lake Fadikha and Kargat River Estuary in Lake Chany, Russia, showing high species specificity and sensitivity in all 3 assays. Further, all 3 assays had high efficiencies ranging from 94.9 to 105.8%. Moliniella anceps, O. ranae, and P. multiglandularis were detected in the environmental water samples through real-time PCR. Thus, we anticipate that our approach will be beneficial for biomonitoring, measuring, and managing ecological systems.
Keyphrases
- real time pcr
- high throughput
- water quality
- human health
- risk assessment
- circulating tumor
- climate change
- cell free
- single molecule
- randomized controlled trial
- life cycle
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- genetic diversity
- systematic review
- label free
- single cell
- living cells
- nucleic acid
- quantum dots
- big data
- machine learning
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- artificial intelligence
- sensitive detection
- contrast enhanced
- fluorescent probe