INTRODUCTION: Surveillance of wildlife populations for diseases is crucial for the early detection of emerging epidemiological situations, protecting animal conservation efforts and safeguarding the public and animal health. Environmental DNA/RNA (eDNA/eRNA) techniques have gained popularity due to their non-invasive nature and efficiency, making them a valuable instrument for monitoring wildlife-re- lated pathogens (wRP). eDNA offers distinct advantages over conventional direct sampling methods, particularly in the detection of parasitic diseases, where the environment serves as a common reservoir for various parasitic life stages and hosts. with the emergence of portable sequencing technologies, eDNA sequencing has become a leading method for early detection of parasitic infections in wildlife. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study focuses on eDNA collected from lotic waters in and around La Mandria Regional Park’s fenced-off area (Piedmont region), recognized as one of the primary Eu- ropean hotspots of Fascioloides magna, an invasive trematode of wild and domestic ruminants (bassi, 1875). we employed active targeted surveillance using Nanopore MinION sequencing and evaluated two enrichment strategies: long-range metabarcoding of protist ribosomal subunits (PCR-dependent in vitro target enrichment) and Nanopore’s Adaptive Sampling (PCR-free real-time in silica target enri- chment). RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate the potential of Nanopore’s Adaptive Sam- pling for efficient, fast, and cost-effective targeted surveillance of parasitic diseases, as evidenced by the difference in detection rates between the two approaches. This suggests a path towards streamlined, real-time in situ genomic-informed surveillance programs

WILDLIFE RELATED PATHOGEN SURVEILLANCE WITH NANOPORE SEQUENCING OF EDNA SAMPLES: COMPARING IN VITRO AND IN SILICA TARGET ENRICHMENT APPROACHES

Varzandi A. R.
First
;
Zanet S.;Pastori I.;Rubele E.;Vada R.;Benatti F.;Ferroglio E.
2024-01-01

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Surveillance of wildlife populations for diseases is crucial for the early detection of emerging epidemiological situations, protecting animal conservation efforts and safeguarding the public and animal health. Environmental DNA/RNA (eDNA/eRNA) techniques have gained popularity due to their non-invasive nature and efficiency, making them a valuable instrument for monitoring wildlife-re- lated pathogens (wRP). eDNA offers distinct advantages over conventional direct sampling methods, particularly in the detection of parasitic diseases, where the environment serves as a common reservoir for various parasitic life stages and hosts. with the emergence of portable sequencing technologies, eDNA sequencing has become a leading method for early detection of parasitic infections in wildlife. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study focuses on eDNA collected from lotic waters in and around La Mandria Regional Park’s fenced-off area (Piedmont region), recognized as one of the primary Eu- ropean hotspots of Fascioloides magna, an invasive trematode of wild and domestic ruminants (bassi, 1875). we employed active targeted surveillance using Nanopore MinION sequencing and evaluated two enrichment strategies: long-range metabarcoding of protist ribosomal subunits (PCR-dependent in vitro target enrichment) and Nanopore’s Adaptive Sampling (PCR-free real-time in silica target enri- chment). RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate the potential of Nanopore’s Adaptive Sam- pling for efficient, fast, and cost-effective targeted surveillance of parasitic diseases, as evidenced by the difference in detection rates between the two approaches. This suggests a path towards streamlined, real-time in situ genomic-informed surveillance programs
2024
Inglese
contributo
2 - Congresso
XXXIII Congresso Nazionale della Società Italiana di Parassitologia
Padova
18 - 21 Giugno 2024
Nazionale
Varzandi A.R., Reska T., Zanet S., Pastori I., Rubele E., Vada R., Benatti F., Fenn A., Urban L., Ferroglio E.
Società Italiana di Parassitologia
Volume Atti Padova 2024 (Abstract book)
172
172
379
https://congresso2024.soipa.it/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Volume Atti XXXIII PADOVA_021.pdf
ISBN 978-88-943575-1-6
wildlife, Targeted surveillance, Nanopore sequencing
GERMANIA
   Wildlife and One Health: wildlife ecology, health surveillance and interaction with livestock, human population and environment
   Enetwild 2.0
   European Food Safety Authority
   OC/EFSA/BIOHAW/2022/01
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Varzandi A.R., Reska T., Zanet S., Pastori I., Rubele E., Vada R., Benatti F., Fenn A., Urban L., Ferroglio E.
10
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
273
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2011830
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