Abstract

African swine fever (ASF) and classical swine fever (CSF) are contagious swine diseases that are clinically indistinguishable from each other; hence, reliable test methods for accurate diagnosis and differentiation are highly demanded. By employing a buffer system suitable for crude extraction of nucleic acids together with an impurity-tolerant enzyme, we established a multiplex assay of real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) for simultaneous detection of ASF virus (ASFV), CSF virus (CSFV) and swine internal control derived genes in a sample without the need for prior purification of viral nucleic acids. We applied this method to test serum and tissue samples of infected pigs and wild boars and compared the statistical sensitivities and specificities with those of standard molecular diagnostic methods. When a serum was used as a test material, the newly established assay showed 94.4% sensitivity for both and 97.9 and 91.9% specificity for ASFV and CSFV detection, respectively. In contrast, the results were 100% identical with those obtained by the standard methods when a crude tissue homogenate was used as a test material. The present data indicate that this new assay offers a practical, quick, and reliable technique for differential diagnosis of ASF and CSF where geographical occurrences are increasingly overlapping.

Highlights

  • African swine fever (ASF) and classical swine fever (CSF) are contagious viral diseases that affect domestic and wild suids

  • The present results indicated that the newly established multiplex reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-polymerase chain reaction (PCR)) was comparable to the authentic test method for ASF virus (ASFV) diagnosis when serum specimens were used as a test sample

  • (B) Detection of the serum and tissue homogenate of tonsils from wild boar suspected to be infected with CSF virus (CSFV)

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Summary

Introduction

African swine fever (ASF) and classical swine fever (CSF) are contagious viral diseases that affect domestic and wild suids. Domestic pigs and other susceptible suid species, especially wild boar, can be the source for virus intrusion into pig farms during the ASF and CSF pandemic [6,7]. These two diseases are indistinguishable from each other by visual inspection of affected animals [1,2]. In ASF and CSF, affected pigs show pyrexia, inappetence, dullness, haemorrhage, and cyanosis Both diseases abrogate the immune systems of host animals and lead to concurrent infections with other viral and bacterial pathogens, which may complicate clinical manifestations

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