Main menu

Rapid detection and characterisation of PRRS resolving mixed infections


Rapid detection and characterisation of PRRS resolving mixed infections poster

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) is a rapidly evolving, highly pathogenic porcine arterivirus, among the most common infectious agents of swine disease, affecting between 30% to 40% of the breeding herds in the US each year.

Traditionally, PRRSV diagnosis involves amplifying (reverse-transcription PCR) and Sanger sequencing of several conserved open reading frames (ORFs), to detect and classify the virus for outbreak management. Herds are often coinfected with both (pathogenic) wild-type viruses and (benign) modified live virus (MLV) vaccines, which are challenging to discriminate by Sanger sequencing.

However, long-read sequencing can rapidly generate full-length amplicon sequences from multiple strains in the same sample, allowing for greater discrimination, increased reliability, and improved turn-around time.

Here we evaluated the Oxford Nanopore platform, compared to Sanger sequencing, for PRRSV-2 amplicon sequencing.

Getting started

Buy a MinION starter pack Nanopore store Sequencing service providers Channel partners

Nanopore technology

Subscribe to Nanopore updates Resources and publications What is the Nanopore Community

About Oxford Nanopore

News Company timeline Sustainability Leadership team Media resources & contacts For investors For partners Working at Oxford Nanopore Current vacancies Commercial information BSI 27001 accreditationBSI 90001 accreditationBSI mark of trust
English flag