2018
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00176
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Illumina Next Generation Sequencing for the Analysis of Eimeria Populations in Commercial Broilers and Indigenous Chickens

Abstract: Eimeria species parasites can cause the enteric disease coccidiosis, most notably in chickens where the economic and welfare implications are significant. Seven Eimeria species are recognized to infect chickens, although understanding of their regional occurrence, abundance, and population structure remains limited. Reports of Eimeria circulating in chickens across much of the southern hemisphere with cryptic genotypes and the capacity to escape current anticoccidial vaccines have revealed unexpected levels of… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…Some studies have utilized non-sporulated oocysts for DNA extraction to minimize the impact of sporulation rate on quantification (91). qPCR has also been applied to validate and standardize next generation sequencing analyses, such as deep sequencing or Eimeria species 18S rDNA PCR amplicons (92).…”
Section: Measures Of Parasite Replicationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some studies have utilized non-sporulated oocysts for DNA extraction to minimize the impact of sporulation rate on quantification (91). qPCR has also been applied to validate and standardize next generation sequencing analyses, such as deep sequencing or Eimeria species 18S rDNA PCR amplicons (92).…”
Section: Measures Of Parasite Replicationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eimeria spp. and Perkinsus marinus are regarded as epizootic diseases that are easily transmitted to hosts that live in close proximity, particularly livestock [34][35]. Neither are zoonotic infections, for instance, birds are the definitive hosts of E. necatrix whereas bivalves (Crassostrea and Mya) are the definitive host for P. marinus, and there is no evidence of Eimeria spp.…”
Section: Consuming Raw or Undercooked Infected Animal Hostsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Amplicon sequencing of 18S rDNA was first applied to communities of Eimeria from the Australian brush-tailed rock-wallaby [ 80 ]. A subsequent study involving Eimeria from chickens also focused on the 18S rDNA, using Illumina MiSeq NGS to sequence amplicons produced from commercial and indigenous chickens sampled in India [ 81 ]. Sequence analysis provided a sensitive assessment of Eimeria species occurrence, validated by standard and quantitative species-specific PCR, and successfully detected the cryptic Eimeria genotypes OTUs x and y as well as a range of other related protozoan pathogens.…”
Section: Population Geneticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, detection of low levels of DNA representing other Eimeria species not classically associated with chickens did appear to indicate some background noise. Annotation of sequences assigned previously to Eimeria infecting rock partridges ( Alectoris graeca ) and wild turkeys ( Meleagris gallopavo ) may have represented farm-level contamination with non-replicating Eimeria oocysts or DNA, or false positives [ 81 ]. These latter results indicate a requirement for additional validation and/or more specific primers.…”
Section: Population Geneticsmentioning
confidence: 99%