Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Highly sensitive detection of small ruminant bovine spongiform encephalopathy within transmissible spongiform encephalopathy mixes by serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification.
- Journal:
- Journal of clinical microbiology
- Year:
- 2014
- Authors:
- Gough, Kevin C et al.
- Affiliation:
- School of Veterinary Medicine and Science · United Kingdom
Plain-English summary
Researchers have been looking into whether sheep and goats in Europe might have been exposed to a disease called bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), which is linked to a past epidemic in cattle. Although there have been strict checks, BSE hasn't been found in sheep and only a couple of cases have been seen in goats. This study developed a new test that can detect BSE even when it's mixed with another similar disease called scrapie, which affects sheep and goats. The test was very effective, correctly identifying BSE in samples with a high level of accuracy. This means the new test could help find BSE if it is present in small ruminants, even if it’s hard to detect.
Abstract
It is assumed that sheep and goats consumed the same bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)-contaminated meat and bone meal that was fed to cattle and precipitated the BSE epidemic in the United Kingdom that peaked more than 20 years ago. Despite intensive surveillance for cases of BSE within the small ruminant populations of the United Kingdom and European Union, no instances of BSE have been detected in sheep, and in only two instances has BSE been discovered in goats. If BSE is present within the small ruminant populations, it may be at subclinical levels, may manifest as scrapie, or may be masked by coinfection with scrapie. To determine whether BSE is potentially circulating at low levels within the European small ruminant populations, highly sensitive assays that can specifically detect BSE, even within the presence of scrapie prion protein, are required. Here, we present a novel assay based on the specific amplification of BSE PrP(Sc) using the serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification assay (sPMCA), which specifically amplified small amounts of ovine and caprine BSE agent which had been mixed into a range of scrapie-positive brain homogenates. We detected the BSE prion protein within a large excess of classical, atypical, and CH1641 scrapie isolates. In a blind trial, this sPMCA-based assay specifically amplified BSE PrP(Sc) within brain mixes with 100% specificity and 97% sensitivity when BSE agent was diluted into scrapie-infected brain homogenates at 1% (vol/vol).
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25143565/