"Pathotyping" multiplex PCR assay for Haemophilus parasuis: A tool for prediction of virulence

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Abstract

Haemophilus parasuis is a diverse bacterial species that is found in the upper respiratory tracts of pigs and can also cause Glässer's disease and pneumonia. A previous pangenome study of H. parasuis identified 48 genes that were associated with clinical disease. Here, we describe the development of a generalized linear model (termed a pathotyping model) to predict the potential virulence of isolates of H. parasuis based on a subset of 10 genes from the pangenome. A multiplex PCR (mPCR) was constructed based on these genes, the results of which were entered into the pathotyping model to yield a prediction of virulence. This new diagnostic mPCR was tested on 143 field isolates of H. parasuis that had previously been whole-genome sequenced and a further 84 isolates from the United Kingdom from cases of H. parasuis-related disease in pigs collected between 2013 and 2014. The combination of the mPCR and the pathotyping model predicted the virulence of an isolate with 78% accuracy for the original isolate collection and 90% for the additional isolate collection, providing an overall accuracy of 83% (81% sensitivity and 93% specificity) compared with that of the "current standard" of detailed clinical metadata. This new pathotyping assay has the potential to aid surveillance and disease control in addition to serotyping data.

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Howell, K. J., Weinert, L. A., Peters, S. E., Wang, J., Hernandez-Garcia, J., Chaudhuri, R. R., … Terra, V. S. (2017). “Pathotyping” multiplex PCR assay for Haemophilus parasuis: A tool for prediction of virulence. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 55(9), 2617–2628. https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.02464-16

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