| Literature DB >> 29272305 |
Claudia Jäckel1, Jens A Hammerl1, Jörg Rau2, Stefan Hertwig1.
Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni and C. coli are important food-borne pathogens that are widespread in animal husbandry. To combat Campylobacter along the food chain, the application of lytic phages has been shown to be a promising tool. Campylobacter phages are currently classified into three groups, of which group II and group III phages are the most common. Members of each group are closely related, whereas the two groups share only little DNA similarity. Moreover, while group III phages are specific for C. jejuni, group II phages additionally infect C. coli. Phage cocktails intended to be used for applications should be composed of various phages that differ in their host range and growth kinetics. The isolation of phages is generally performed by plaque assays. This approach has the limitation that phages are merely identified by their lytic activity on certain indicator strains and that relatively high numbers of phages must be present in a tested sample. Therefore, a more sensitive molecular detection system would be beneficial, which allows a pre-screening of samples and the quick detection and discrimination of group II and group III phages. New phages can then be isolated by use of indicator strains that may be different from those typically applied. On the basis of available Campylobacter phage genome sequences, we developed a multiplex PCR system for group II and group III phages selecting the tail tube gene and the gene for the base plate wedge, respectively, as target. Phages of both groups could be identified with primers deduced from the putative tail fiber gene. Efficient release of phage DNA from capsids was achieved by an extended heat treatment or digestion of phage particles with proteinase K/SDS yielding a detection limit of 1 pfu/ml. Individual detection of group II phages, group III phages and of both groups was studied with artificially contaminated chicken skin. To recover phages that had strongly adhered to the skin, stomaching was the most efficient technique. The developed PCR protocol was employed to detect Campylobacter phages in food and environmental samples. In 50 out of 110 samples group II and/or group III phages were identified.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29272305 PMCID: PMC5741259 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Phage genomes analysed for the presence of possible target sequences.
| Accession number | Description (genome size, origin) | Group | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CP81 | FR823450.1 | 132,454 bp, Germany | III | [ |
| CP30A | JX569801.1 | 133,572 bp, UK | III | [ |
| NCTC12673 | GU296433.1 | 135,041 bp, UK | III | [ |
| PC14 | KX236333.1 | 134,927 bp, Slovenia | III | [ |
| PC5 | KX229736.1 | 131,095 bp, Slovenia | III | [ |
| vB_CjeM_Los1 | KX879627.1 | 134,073 bp, Ireland | III | [ |
| CPX | NC_016562.1 | 132,662 bp, UK | III | Unpublished |
| CP8 | KF148616.1 | 132,667 bp, UK | III | [ |
| CP21 | HE815464.1 | 182,833 bp, Germany | II | [ |
| CP220 | FN667788.1 | 177,534 bp, UK | II | [ |
| CPt10 | FN667789.1 | 175,720 bp, UK | II | [ |
| vB_CcoM-IBB_35 | HM246720.1 to HM246724.1 | 172,065 bp | II | [ |
1 The genome of vB_CcoM-IBB_35 (IBB_35) is available in five sequence contigs.
Phages used to verify the developed PCR.
| Accession number | Description | Group | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CP81 | FR823450.1 | 132,454 bp, Germany | III | [ |
| CP1 | n.a. | ~135 kb | III | [ |
| CP14 | n.a. | ~135 kb | III | [ |
| F14 | n.a. | ~135 kb | III | [ |
| CP32 | n.a. | ~135 kb | III | [ |
| CP21 | HE815464.1 | 182,833 bp, Germany | II | [ |
| CP75 | n.a. | ~185 kb | II | [ |
| CP7 | n.a. | ~185 kb | II | [ |
| CP68 | n.a. | ~185 kb | II | [ |
| CP84 | n.a. | ~185 kb | II | [ |
| CP83 | n.a. | ~185 kb | II | [ |
n.a.: not available;
*: genome sizes were estimated by PFGE analysis of phage DNA.
Primers and probes for the qPCR detection of Campylobacter phages.
| CPGII-F | Group II phages (CP21 ORF186) | |
| CPGII-R | ||
| CPGII-probe | ||
| CPGIII-F | Group III phages, (CP81 ORF008) | |
| CPGIII-R | ||
| CPGIII-probe | ||
| CPGII/GIII-F1 | Group II & III phages (CP21 ORF096 and CP81 ORF002) | |
| CPGII/GIII-R1 | ||
| CPGII/GIII-probe |
Abbreviations: F: forward primer; R: reverse primer; probe: fluorescently labeled primer; FAM: 6-Carboxyfluorescein, BHQ-1: Black Hole Quencher Dye 1, Cy5: Cyanine Dye 5, YY: Yakima Yellow, BBQ-650: BlackBerry Quencher 650, Y: C or T, K: G or T, D: G, A or T.
Fig 1Synteny plot based on the amino acid similarity of Campylobacter group II and group III phages.
Fig 2Alignments of target sequences used for the detection of Campylobacter phages.
Primers and probes for the specific detection of group III phages (A), group II phages (B) and of both groups (C) are boxed by red and green lines, respectively.
Detection limits of Campylobacter phages by conventional PCR and qPCR.
| CPGII detection | CPGIII detection | CPGII/GIII detection | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCR | qPCR | PCR | qPCR | PCR | qPCR | |
| CP21 lysate | ||||||
| Untreated control | 104 | 101 | n.d. | n.d. | 104−103 | 102 |
| Heat treatment (20 min, 96°C) | 103 | 100 | n.d. | n.d. | 103 | 101 |
| Proteinase K/SDS treatment | 103 | 100 | n.d. | n.d. | 103 | 101−100 |
| CP81 lysate | ||||||
| Untreated control | n.d. | n.d. | 104−103 | 101 | 105 | 103 |
| Heat treatment (20 min, 96°C) | n.d. | n.d. | 103 | 100 | 104 | 102 |
| Proteinase K/SDS treatment | n.d. | n.d. | 103−102 | 100 | 104 | 102 |
Results are given in pfu/ml.
Detection of Campylobacter phages in environmental and food samples by qPCR.
| Sample | No. of samples | CPGII-detection | CPGIII-detection | CPGII/GIII-detection | Negatives |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turkey | 19 (100%) | 4 (21%) | 6 (32%) | 10 (53%) | 9 (47%) |
| Chicken | 51 (100%) | 9 (18%) | 22 (43%) | 28 (55%) | 21 (41%) |
| Duck | 4 (100%) | 1 (25%) | 2 (50%) | 2 (50%) | 2 (50%) |
| Lamb | 2 (100%) | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
| Pork | 4 (100%) | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
| Pig | 3 (100%) | 1 (33%) | 1 (33%) | 2 (66%) | 1 (33%) |
| Fowl | 3 (100%) | n.d. | 2 (66%) | 2 (66%) | 1 (33%) |
| Wild birds | 1 (100%) | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
| Dust & surface | 6 (100%) | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | 6 (100%) |
| Water | 13 (100%) | 2 (15%) | 2 (15%) | 4 (31%) | 9 (69%) |
n.d., not detected