Login / Signup

Rapid visual detection of Micropterus salmoides rhabdovirus using recombinase polymerase amplification combined with lateral flow dipsticks.

Zizhao FengXin ChuMinzhen HanChenwei YuYousheng JiangHao WangLiqun LuDan Xu
Published in: Journal of fish diseases (2022)
Largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) is an important freshwater-cultured species in China. Recently, a lethal and epidemic disease caused by Micropterus salmoides rhabdovirus (MSRV) results in huge economic losses to the largemouth bass industry. Current diagnostics for detecting MSRV are limited in sensitivity and speed and are inconvenient to be used for non-laboratory detection. In this study, three rapid and convenient detection assays of MSRV by recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) and lateral flow dipsticks (LFD), targeting the conserved sequences of the MSRV-SS N gene, are described. With these RPA methods, the detection could achieve within 50 min at 38°C. Both methods of RPA-AGE and RPA-LFD could detect the viral DNA as low as 170 copies/μl of the MSRV standard plasmid and were 100-fold more sensitive than that in the method of routine PCR. Meanwhile, these RPA methods were highly specific for the detection of MSRV and can be feasibly applied to the diagnostic of MSRV infection. In brief, RPA-AGE, RPA-LFD and RT-RPA-LFD provide convenient, rapid, sensitive and reliable methods that could improve field diagnosis of MSRV with limited machine resources, and would enhance the production of largemouth bass.
Keyphrases