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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Development of a multiplex lateral flow strip test for foot-and-mouth disease virus detection using monoclonal antibodies.

Journal:
Journal of virological methods
Year:
2015
Authors:
Yang, Ming et al.
Affiliation:
National Centre for Foreign Animal Disease · Canada

Plain-English summary

Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly contagious illness that affects animals and can lead to significant economic losses. Researchers have developed a new test called the multiplex lateral flow immunochromatographic strip test, which can quickly identify different types of FMD viruses right at the site of an outbreak. This test uses special antibodies to detect three specific virus types: O, A, and Asia 1. In trials, the test successfully identified these virus types in various samples from infected animals, showing it works well for most cases. Overall, this new test is a promising tool for quickly diagnosing FMD during outbreaks.

Abstract

Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is one of the world's most highly contagious animal diseases with tremendous economic consequences. A rapid and specific test for FMD diagnosis at the site of a suspected outbreak is crucial for the implementation of control measures. This project developed a multiplex lateral flow immunochromatographic strip test (multiplex-LFI) for the rapid detection and serotyping of FMD viruses. The monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against serotypes O, A, and Asia 1 were used as capture mAbs. The mAbs were conjugated with fluorescein, rhodamine or biotin for serotype O, A and Asia 1, respectively. The detection mAbs which consisted of a serotype-independent mAb in combination with one serotype A-specific mAb and one Asia 1-specific mAb, were each colloidal gold-conjugated. The strips used in this study contained one control line and three test lines, which corresponded to one of the three serotypes, O, A or Asia 1. The newly developed multiplex-LFI strip test specifically identified serotype O (n=46), A (n=45) and Asia 1 (n=17) in all tested field isolates. The sensitivity of this strip test was comparable to the double antibody sandwich ELISA for serotypes O and A, but lower than the ELISA for serotype Asia 1. The multiplex-LFI strip test identified all tissue suspensions from animals that were experimentally inoculated with serotypes O, A or Asia 1. FMD viruses were detected in 38% and 50% of the swab samples from the lesion areas of experimentally inoculated sheep for serotypes O and A, respectively. The capability of the multiplex-LFI strip tests to produce rapid results with high specificity for FMD viruses of multiple serotypes makes this test a valuable tool to detect FMD viruses at outbreak sites.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25977185/