La Trobe

Evaluation of LAMP for Fasciola hepatica detection from faecal samples of experimentally and naturally infected cattle

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-10, 03:45 authored by Tanjina Bari, Md Abdullah Al Mamun, Hayley ToetHayley Toet, Vignesh Rathinasamy, Jo-Ann Larkins, Travis BeddoeTravis Beddoe, Terry SpithillTerry Spithill, David Piedrafita, Andrew R Greenhill
Fasciola hepatica causes liver fluke disease in production animals and humans worldwide. Faecal egg counts (FEC) are the most common diagnostic tool for the diagnosis of liver fluke disease. However, FEC has low sensitivity and is often unreliable for the detection of patent infection. In this study, loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) was optimised and evaluated for the detection of Fasciola hepatica infection, with the aim of increased sensitivity and making it suitable for on-farm application. LAMP was initially conducted under laboratory conditions, optimised to enable visual detection using calcein dye. DNA extraction based on bead-beating was developed to enable on-farm application. LAMP results were compared to FEC and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Under laboratory conditions, LAMP was conducted using two incubation methods: a conventional PCR thermocycler and a field-deployable LAMP instrument. When compared to a ‘rigorous’ FEC protocol consisting of multiple counts using a comparatively large volume of faeces and with infection confirmed post-mortem, LAMP was highly sensitive and specific (using silica membrane DNA extraction sensitivity 88 %, specificity 100 %; using sieving and beat-beating DNA extraction sensitivity 98.9 %, specificity 100 %). When applied on-farm, LAMP was compared to conventional FEC, which suggested high sensitivity but low specificity (sensitivity 97 %, specificity 37.5 %). However, further analysis, comparing field LAMP results to laboratory PCR, suggested that the low specificity was likely the outcome of the inability of conventional FEC to detect all true F. hepatica positive samples. Based on the high sensitivity and specificity of LAMP compared to a ‘rigorous’ FEC protocol and its ability to be used in field settings, the study demonstrates the potential of LAMP for diagnosing F. hepatica infection in agriculture.

Funding

The work of Tanjina Bari has been supported by the Australian Government scholarship (Endeavour) . The work of Vignesh Rathinasamy was supported by a Victoria India Doctoral Scholarship funded by Government of Victoria and administered by the Australia India Institute and a PhD scholarship from La Trobe University. This research was partially supported through the Australian Research Council through Linkage Project LP130100943 and Linkage Project LP160100442 (Terry Spithill and Travis Beddoe)

History

Publication Date

2024-04-01

Journal

Veterinary Parasitology

Volume

327

Article Number

110132

Pagination

6p.

Publisher

Elsevier B.V.

ISSN

0304-4017

Rights Statement

© 2024 The Authors. This is an open access article under the CC BY license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/