4.7 Article

Detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus DNA by digital droplet PCR in sheep blood

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-89782-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Regione Campania and Regione Basilicata

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Highly pathogenic bovine papillomaviruses (BPVs) were detected and quantified for the first time in 103 clinically healthy sheep using digital droplet polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) liquid biopsy. The study identified different genotypes of BPVs and their prevalence, with some genotypes being more common in certain geographical areas. The findings also highlighted the utility of ddPCR in accurate detection and quantification of BPVs compared to conventional qPCR methods, emphasizing its importance for diagnostic and epidemiological purposes, as well as for understanding cross-species transmission in animal husbandry practices.
Highly pathogenic bovine papillomaviruses (BPVs) were detected and quantified for the first time using digital droplet polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) by liquid biopsy in 103 clinically healthy sheep. Overall, ddPCR detected BPVs in 68 blood samples (66%). BPV infection by a single genotype was revealed in 61.8% of the blood samples, and BPV coinfection by double, triple or quadruple genotypes was observed in 38.2% of liquid biopsies. The BPV-2 genotype was most frequently seen in sheep, whereas BPV-1 was the least common. Furthermore, ddPCR was very useful for detection and quantification; the BPV-14 genotype was observed for the first time in ovine species, displaying the highest prevalence in some geographical areas (Apulia). In 42 of the positive samples (61.8%), a single BPV infection was observed, 26 of which were caused by BPV-2 (61.9%) and 7 by BPV-13 (16.7%). BPV-14 was responsible for 7 single infections (16.7%) and BPV-1 for 2 single infections (4.7%). Multiple BPV coinfections were observed in the remaining 26 positive samples (38.2%), with dual BPV-2/BPV-13 infection being the most prevalent (84.6%). BPV infection by triple and quadruple genotypes was also observed in 11.5% and 3.8% of cases, respectively. The present study showed that ddPCR, a biotechnological refinement of conventional PCR, is by far the most sensitive and accurate assay for BPV detection compared to conventional qPCR. Therefore, ddPCR displayed an essential diagnostic and epidemiological value very useful for the identification of otherwise undetectable BPV genotypes as well as their geographical distributions and suggesting that animal husbandry practices contribute to cross-species transmission of BPVs.

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