Journal article

A host-specific blocking primer combined with optimal dna extraction improves the detection capability of a metabarcoding protocol for canine vector-borne bacteria

LG Huggins, AV Koehler, B Schunack, T Inpankaew, RJ Traub

Pathogens | MDPI | Published : 2020

Abstract

Bacterial canine vector-borne diseases are responsible for some of the most life-threatening conditions of dogs in the tropics and are typically poorly researched with some presenting a zoonotic risk to cohabiting people. Next-generation sequencing based methodologies have been demonstrated to accurately characterise a diverse range of vector-borne bacteria in dogs, whilst also proving to be more sensitive than conventional PCR techniques. We report two improvements to a previously developed metabarcoding tool that increased the sensitivity and diversity of vector-borne bacteria detected from canine blood. Firstly, we developed and tested a canine-specific blocking primer that prevents cross..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers