Abstract

Nosema bombycis, the pathogen of silkworm pébrine, causes enormous economic losses to sericulture. As such, quarantine of commercial silkworm eggs represents an important safeguard to the silkworm industry. Here, we established a user-friendly detection system based on a nucleic acid lateral flow strip (NAFLS) that combines polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and a colloidal gold strip. PCR primers were designed based on the sequence of LSU rDNA of N. bombycis and has favourable specificity for common microsporidian isolates in silkworms. The forward and reverse primers were labeled on the 5' end with biotin and carboxyfluorescein (FAM), respectively. Genomic DNA was extracted from egg samples and was used as a template for PCR, followed by subsequent detection by NALFS. The detection limit of purified N. bombycis genomic DNA was 1 pg, 100× more sensitive than that of agarose gel electrophoresis (AGE). Furthermore, the sensitivity of detection of simulated "infected" silkworm eggs was 10-100× higher than that of AGE. NALFS detected infection in 27 of 29 samples of silkworm eggs oviposited by female moths infected in lab; ≥2% infected eggs per batch are detected as positive, while ≥40% infected eggs per batch are required for detection by AGE. Collectively, NALFS is easy to use and has great potential for widespread use in the detection of N. bombycis in silkworm egg production.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call