Abstract

BackgroundIn eco-epidemiological studies, Leishmania detection in vectors and reservoirs is frequently accomplished by high-throughput and sensitive molecular methods that target minicircle kinetoplast DNA (kDNA). A pan-Leishmania SYBR green quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay which detects the conserved spliced-leader RNA (SL RNA) sequence was developed recently. This study assessed the SL RNA assay performance combined with a crude extraction method for the detection of Leishmania in field-collected and laboratory-reared sand flies and in tissue samples from hyraxes as reservoir hosts.MethodsField-collected and laboratory-infected sand fly and hyrax extracts were subjected to three different qPCR approaches to assess the suitability of the SL RNA target for Leishmania detection. Nucleic acids of experimentally infected sand flies were isolated with a crude extraction buffer with ethanol precipitation and a commercial kit and tested for downstream DNA and RNA detection. Promastigotes were isolated from culture and sand fly midguts to assess whether there was difference in SL RNA and kDNA copy numbers. Naive sand flies were spiked with a serial dilution of promastigotes to make a standard curve.ResultsThe qPCR targeting SL RNA performed well on infected sand fly samples, despite preservation and extraction under presumed unfavorable conditions for downstream RNA detection. Nucleic acid extraction by a crude extraction buffer combined with a precipitation step was highly compatible with downstream SL RNA and kDNA detection. Copy numbers of kDNA were found to be identical in culture-derived parasites and promastigotes isolated from sand fly midguts. SL RNA levels were slightly lower in sand fly promastigotes (ΔCq 1.7). The theoretical limit of detection and quantification of the SL RNA qPCR respectively reached down to 10−3 and 10 parasite equivalents. SL RNA detection in stored hyrax samples was less efficient with some false-negative assay results, most likely due to the long-term tissue storage in absence of RNA stabilizing reagents.ConclusionsThis study shows that a crude extraction method in combination with the SL RNA qPCR assay is suitable for the detection and quantification of Leishmania in sand flies. The assay is inexpensive, sensitive and pan-Leishmania specific, and accordingly an excellent assay for high-throughput screening in entomological research.

Highlights

  • In eco-epidemiological studies, Leishmania detection in vectors and reservoirs is frequently accomplished by high-throughput and sensitive molecular methods that target minicircle kinetoplast DNA

  • We aimed to evaluate the SL spliced leader RNA (RNA) quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay in combination with a crude extraction procedure for detection and quantification of Leishmania parasites in field- and laboratory-collected sand flies and hyrax tissue samples collected in Ethiopia

  • Among the samples that were positive by all qPCRs, the 18S DNA marker provided the highest mean quantification cycle (Cq) value (30.3 ± 2.3), followed by MP kinetoplast DNA (kDNA) (17.3 ± 1.4), JW kDNA (14.6 ± 1.4) and spliced-leader RNA (SL RNA) (13.8 ± 0.9)

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Summary

Introduction

In eco-epidemiological studies, Leishmania detection in vectors and reservoirs is frequently accomplished by high-throughput and sensitive molecular methods that target minicircle kinetoplast DNA (kDNA). This study assessed the SL RNA assay performance combined with a crude extraction method for the detection of Leishmania in field-collected and laboratory-reared sand flies and in tissue samples from hyraxes as reservoir hosts. For eco-epidemiological research, which is often covering large sample sizes, there is a need for low-cost, sensitive, high-throughput methods to identify and quantify Leishmania parasites in (potential) vectors and hosts [6]. The golden standard for parasite detection in sand flies and animal tissues is microscopy examination This method allows to confirm the presence of viable parasites, but is time consuming and requires a substantial level of expertise [7]. These drawbacks resulted in a shift towards sample screening with molecular assays. Extraction approaches with lysis buffers containing SDS, EDTA, Tris-HCl and NaCl have been applied successfully to various tissues [9], this crude procedure may lead to inhibition in downstream molecular applications [8]

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