4.4 Article

Development and Validation of a Quantitative PCR Method for Species Verification and Serogroup Determination of Listeria monocytogenes Isolates

Journal

JOURNAL OF FOOD PROTECTION
Volume 84, Issue 2, Pages 333-344

Publisher

INT ASSOC FOOD PROTECTION
DOI: 10.4315/JFP-20-178

Keywords

Listeria monocytogenes; qPCR characterization; Serotyping

Funding

  1. University of Maryland Joint Institute for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration [FDU001418]

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A novel quantitative PCR method was developed for rapid and accurate confirmation of Listeria monocytogenes and serogroup classification, demonstrating higher accuracy compared to traditional methods. This method is crucial for quickly identifying Lm and enabling whole genome sequencing analysis.
Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) is one of the leading causes of death because of foodborne illness, affecting the elderly, pregnant women, neonates, and people who are inununocompromised. Serologically, Lm can be classified into 13 serotypes, although only 4 are typically linked with food contamination and illness. Since 2000, a shift in serotypes involved in listeriosis outbreaks has been observed, suggesting that tracking of serotypes could help identify emerging trends. A PCR method developed in 2004 allowed detection of the four major serotypes as molecular scrogroups, corresponding to broad phylogenetic groups. In this study, a novel quantitative PCR (qPCR) method was developed that uses two multiplex qPCRs, one to confirm the Listeria genus and Lm species and the second for Lm molecular serogrouping. This method was compared with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Bacteriological Analytical Manual (BAM) method for Lm and the seroagglutination method, using a 208-strain panel. Comparison of the genus and species qPCR assay with the BAM methods found an equal or slightly higher accuracy for the qPCR method (>98%), compared with the BAM protocol (>96%), when evaluated against independent characterization data. Molecular serogrouping using the qPCR method (96.6%) was more accurate than the seroagglutination assay (75.6%). The qPCR method identified Lm 4bV strains, which could not be resolved using seroagglutination. The qPCR could not identify lineage III and IV serotype 4b strains but did correctly identify 16 of 18 lineage III and IV strains. The qPCR method performed genus identification for the Listeria species Lm, L. innocua, L. welshimeri, L. ivanovii, and L. seeligeri. In addition, the method performed species identification for Lm and classified Lm into six molecular serogroups: 2A, 2B, 2C, 4B, NT, and 4bV. This method provided a rapid and accurate confirmation of Lm and serogroup determinations; furthermore, it could help identify otherwise unlinked strains by enabling whole genome sequencing analysis based on broad pbylogeny, independent of other information.

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