| Literature DB >> 31890253 |
Briony M Atkinson1, Bradley L Bearson2, Crystal L Loving1, Jeffrey J Zimmerman3, Jalusa D Kich1,4, Shawn M D Bearson1.
Abstract
Salmonella is a leading cause of bacterial foodborne-related illness and pork products are a food-associated source. With > 50% of U.S. swine herds testing positive for Salmonella, asymptomatic carrier pigs that shed Salmonella in their feces are a food safety and environmental contamination issue. Herd level surveillance of Salmonella shedding status is useful, but collection of feces and culture methods for Salmonella detection are laborious and time-consuming. Surveillance for Salmonella-exposure through detection of Salmonella-specific serum antibody is a reliable method, but presents labor and animal-welfare issues. Oral fluids are a reliable, antemortem sample with proven utility for surveillance in the swine industry. We tested oral fluid samples as a potential non-invasive, repeatable sample type for the presence of Salmonella-specific antibodies. An indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) detected anti-Salmonella IgG, IgM, and predominantly IgA in oral fluids from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium-exposed pigs. Furthermore, with minor modifications, a commercial ELISA-based kit also detected Salmonella-specific antibodies in oral fluids. Collectively, oral fluids may serve as a prospective surveillance tool for herd level monitoring of Salmonella exposure.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody detection; Oral fluids; Salmonella; Swine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31890253 PMCID: PMC6915926 DOI: 10.1186/s40813-019-0136-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Porcine Health Manag ISSN: 2055-5660
Fig. 1Detection of anti-Salmonella immunoglobulins in swine oral fluids. Oral fluid samples were collected from S. Typhimurium UK-1 challenged pigs (SB377) at the indicated day (D) relative to inoculation. Samples were evaluated for Salmonella SB377-specific IgA, IgG, and IgM antibody in an in-house ELISA. Oral fluid samples are a herd level sample, therefore only a single data point is presented for each collection date. Results from experiment 1 (n = 3 pigs) are presented in panel A and from experiment 2 (n = 14 pigs) in panel B. The horizontal dotted line denotes the limit of detection (LOD) set by the pre-challenge oral fluid samples
Anti-Salmonella immunoglobulins are detected in swine oral fluids with slight modifications to the IDEXX HerdChek Swine Salmonella Test Kit
Oral fluid samples from experiment 2 served as the negative oral fluid control (D0, prior to inoculation) and positive oral fluid control (D15, post-inoculation) for calculating sample-to-positive (S/P) ratios for experiment 1 (orange highlight). Oral fluid samples from experiment 1 served as the negative oral fluid control (D0, prior to inoculation) and positive oral fluid control (D55, post-inoculation) for calculating S/P ratios for experiment 2 (gray highlight). S/P ratios for the oral fluid samples highlighted in yellow were calculated using the kit-supplied negative control (− control) and positive control (+ control). S/P ratios were calculated using optical density (OD) measurements in the following formula:
S/P = (ODsample – ODNC)/(ODPC – ODNC)
Ratios ≥0.25 were considered positive while < 0.25 were considered negative