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Development of a qPCR assay for Fasciola spp. identification and a deep amplicon sequencing method for differentiation of fluke species in UK livestock
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Development of a qPCR assay for Fasciola spp. identification and a deep amplicon sequencing method for differentiation of fluke species in UK livestock

Muhammad Abbas, Kezia Kozel, Olukayode Daramola, Nick Selemetas, Qasim Ali, Shoaib Ashraf, Ibrahim Isah, Inaki Deza-Cruz, Sai Fingerhood, Mark W Robinson, …
PLoS neglected tropical diseases, Vol.20(2), p.e0014006
17/02/2026
PMID: 41701785

Abstract

Animals Cattle Cattle Diseases - diagnosis Cattle Diseases - parasitology DNA, Helminth - genetics Fasciola - classification Fasciola - genetics Fasciola - isolation & purification Fascioliasis - diagnosis Fascioliasis - parasitology Fascioliasis - veterinary Feces - parasitology High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing - methods Livestock - parasitology Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction - methods Sensitivity and Specificity Sheep Sheep Diseases - diagnosis Sheep Diseases - parasitology United Kingdom
Trematode parasites, or flukes, are a significant economic threat to ruminant production worldwide. Traditional diagnostic methods rely on egg sedimentation from faeces, a time-consuming methodology lacking sensitivity and specificity. This study aimed to develop and validate two detection methods: firstly, qPCR for accurate identification of Fasciola spp., and secondly, a deep amplicon sequencing technique for identifying fluke species using faecal sedimented egg DNA. To detect Fasciola spp., infection, primers targeting mitochondrial DNA were repurposed to develop a SYBR Green qPCR assay. For the identification of fluke species, a deep amplicon sequencing approach was developed. A reference sequence library and taxonomy file were generated for 21 fluke species, potentially enabling species-level sequence read separation for a range of trematodes and extraction of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs). To validate the qPCR and deep amplicon sequencing approach, 402 faecal samples were collected from cattle and sheep across the UK. Fluke eggs were isolated by sedimentation, screened by microscopy and qPCR, Sanger sequencing and deep amplicon sequencing to identify fluke eggs to species level. qPCR demonstrated high analytical sensitivity, detecting Fasciola hepatica DNA down to 19.2 fg and F. gigantica down to 6.4 fg, with no cross-amplification of other flukes. Deep amplicon sequencing was able to detect as few as five F. hepatica and Calicophoron daubneyi eggs and identify mixed infections. High levels of co-infection (14.4%) of F. hepatica and C. daubneyi were observed in faecal samples, followed by single infections with C. daubneyi (12.6%) and F. hepatica (3.2%). Notably, deep amplicon sequencing detected F. hepatica in 20 samples missed by qPCR. Data analysis identified 55 and 32 ASVs for F. hepatica and C. daubneyi, respectively, with phylogenetic clustering within their respective clades. This study developed a qPCR assay for Fasciola spp. detection and validated a deep amplicon sequencing for fluke species differentiation. These approaches are able to identify fluke species in excreta from infected ruminants and provide additional valuable tools for enhancing fasciolosis surveillance and control.
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https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0014006View
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