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1.
Mol Biol Rep ; 50(3): 2421-2433, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36592289

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Herbal medicines have recently attracted increasing attention for use as food supplements with health benefits; however, species authentication can be difficult due to incomplete morphological characters. Here, a molecular tool was developed for the identification of species in the National List of Essential Medicinal Plants in Thailand. METHODS: The identification process used DNA fingerprints including start codon targeted (SCoT) and inter simple sequence repeat (ISSR) polymorphisms, coupled with high resolution melting (HRM), to produce melting fingerprint (MF)-HRM. RESULTS: Results indicated that MF-HRM, SCoT-HRM and ISSR-HRM could be used for DNA fingerprints as S34, S36, S9 and S8 of SCoT and UBC873, S25 and UBC841 of ISSR. The melting fingerprints obtained from S34 of SCoT exhibited the best primers for identification of herbal species with 87.5% accuracy and relatively high repeatability. The presence of intraspecific variation in a few species affected the shift of melting fingerprints within species. MF-HRM using S34 showed improved species prediction compared to DNA fingerprints. The concentration of DNA with 10 ng/µl was recommended to perform MF-HRM. MF-HRM enabled species authentication of herbal commercialized products at only 20% resulting from the low quality of DNA isolated, while admixture of multiple product species interfered with the MF process. CONCLUSION: Findings suggested that MF-HRM showed promise as a molecular tool for the authentication of species in commercial herbal products with high specificity, moderate repeatability and rapidity without prior sequence information. This information will greatly improve quality control and traceability during the manufacturing process.


Subject(s)
DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic , Plants, Medicinal , DNA, Plant/genetics , DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic/methods , Plants, Medicinal/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction , DNA Primers
2.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 20560, 2022 11 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36446883

ABSTRACT

Canine babesiosis is a tick-borne disease caused by Babesia spp., which infects and destroys healthy erythrocytes, leading to mortality and morbidity in dogs. The diagnosis of babesiosis is tedious and time-consuming, especially in latent and chronic infections. Here, a recombinase polymerase amplification combined with a lateral flow dipstick (RPA-LFD) assay was developed for rapid and accurate detection of Babesia spp. in canine blood specimens based on the 18S rRNA region. The RPA-LFD assay using rpaBab264 gave specificity to Babesia spp. in dogs (B. vogeli and B. gibsoni) without cross-amplification to other parasites (apicomplexans and non-apicomplexans), with detection limit of at least 22.5 copies/µl (0.1 fg/µl) at 40 °C for at least 10 min. The whole process of DNA amplification by RPA and readout by LFD did not exceed 30 min. To determine the performance of the RPA-LFD assay, a total of 30 clinical samples was examined and compared with conventional PCR (cPCR) and multiplex HRM (mHRM). Eight dogs (26.67%) were detected as positive by RPA-LFD, while seven and six were found positive by cPCR and mHRM, respectively. RPA-LFD and cPCR showed high agreement with Babesia spp. detection with kappa > 0.9. We confirmed that the dogs were infected by B. vogeli from sequences of positive PCR results. Our findings suggested that RPA-LFD using the rpaBab264 assay offered a rapid, accurate, cost-effective and simple method for Babesia spp. detection that is feasibly applicable to be rapid kit at a pet hospital or point-of-care testing.


Subject(s)
Babesia , Babesiosis , Dogs , Animals , Recombinases , Babesia/genetics , Babesiosis/diagnosis , Nucleotidyltransferases , Polymerase Chain Reaction
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