Author/Authors :
Vichaibun, Virun Biochemistry Unit - Department of Biomedical Science - Faculty of Science - Rangsit University - Pathum Thani 12000, Thailand , Kanchanaphum, Panan Biochemistry Unit - Department of Biomedical Science - Faculty of Science - Rangsit University - Pathum Thani 12000, Thailand
Abstract :
Salmonella is a bacterium that infects people when they consume contaminated food or liquids. To prevent humans from becoming
ill, it is useful to have an efficient method of detecting Salmonella before the disease is passed on through the food chain. In this
research, the efficiency of Salmonella detection was compared using the following four methods: conventional loop-mediated
isothermal amplification (LAMP), PCR, quantitative LAMP (qLAMP), and qPCR. The artificial infection of chicken samples
started with incubating of 10 mL of 108CFU of S. typhimurium for 6 hr. and enriching for 2 hr. to represent real contamination
of the samples. The results show that the sensitivity of Salmonella DNA detection in PCR, qPCR, LAMP, and qLAMP were
50 ng, 5 ng, 50 pg, and and 500 fg, respectively. Thirty samples of 10 g chicken were collected from 10 markets in Pathum Thani,
Thailand; then, the infection was detected. The conventional LAMP, qLAMP, and qPCR methods detected Salmonella in all the
chicken samples. However, the conventional PCR method detected Salmonella infection in only eight of the samples. Overall,
the qLAMP method had the highest sensitivity of Salmonella DNA detection.
Keywords :
Quantitative LAMP , PCR Detection , Salmonella , Chicken Samples , Local Markets , Thailand