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NATIONAL VETERINARY RESEARCH INSTITUTE PARTYZANTOW 57 24-100 PULAWY, POLAND tel. (48) 81 8863051 fax (48) 81 8862595 http://www.piwet.pulawy.pl Pulawy NATIONAL VETERINARY RESEARCH INSTITUTE established in 1945 as a scientific institution of the Ministry of Agriculture The major mission of the NVRI is applied research in veterinary medicine and provide services for the public veterinary sector Scheme of veterinary services in Poland Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development National Veterinary Research Institute National Reference Laboratories Prime Minister’s Office Veterinary Inspection Chief Veterinary Officer Regional Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratories 16 Branch laboratories 29 Private laboratories 60 Private practicioners Voivodship Veterinary Inspectorate Voivodship Veterinary Officer 16 District Veterinary Inspectorate District Veterinary Officer 295 Border Veterinary Inspectorate 27 National Veterinary Research Institute Research staff The Institute employs 350 persons 33 researchers with Sc.D. and Ph.D. 40 researchers with Ph.D 49 researchers with D.V.M. or M.Sc 102 technicians Organization of the NVRI Laboratories representing basic disciplines (bacteriology, virology, biochemistry, parasitology, pathology,toxicology and pharmacology, food and feedingstuffs hygiene Laboratories for the diseases of particular animal species: equine, swine, poultry, fish Laboratories for diseases of special significance for animals and husbandry (tuberculosis, foot and mounth disease, mastitis) and zoonoses The NVRI contributes the activity on the following fields: Experimental research into animal diseases Reference activity dedicated to the regional diagnostic laboratories and the Veterinary Inspection Active surveillance - implementation and execution of the Multiannual Monitoring Programme 17.01.2005 Construction of the new laboratories started National reference laboratories (NRL) A network of 14 laboratories within different departments of NVRI appointed with the Act of Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of October 21, 2004 for the reference activities The most important elements in the functioning of the NRL are: Reference duties are fully integrated with activity of NVRI departments undertaking research and training Reference activity has its own budget Activities of NRL (46) Department/Laboratory Reference activity Microbiology Brucellosis, antrax, listeriosis, tubercullosis Virology BSE, rabies, IBR/IPV, EAV, EVA Swine Diseases CSF, Aujeszky’s Dis., leptospirosis, TGE Pathology BSE, scrapie Biochemistry Bovine leukosis, MVV, CAEV Cattle & Sheep Disease Q fever, chlamydiosis, CBPP, Poultry Diseases HPAI, Newcastle Dis., Gumboro Dis., Marek Dis., mycoplasmosis, Food and Mouth Disease FMD, SVD Fish Diseases IHN, ISA, SV, VHS, IPN, BKD Radiology & Toxicology Dioxines, nitrosoamines Pharmacology &Toxicology Residues of pesticides, PCBs, toxic elements, veterinary drugs, hormones, mycotoxins Higiene of Food of Animal Origin Food microbiology Higiene of Animal Feedingstuff PAP, medicated feedingstuff, microbiological agents What are the duties of NRL? to collaborate with the regional laboratories in terms of harmonization standards and diagnostic methods to carry out the proficiency tests to control the quality of diagnostic reagents used for the tests reffered to the diagnosis of infectious diseases to collect and process epidemiological data related to animal infectious diseases and official food control to perform laboratory examinations to confirm the results done by authorized laboratories, if there are some doubts to train the employees of the authorised laboratories NRL for Campylobacter Located at Department of Hygiene of Food of Animal Origin of NVRI Campylobacter – main activities (since 2004) Development of molecular identification methods (PCR) Application of PCR and RFLP methods for differentiation of the strains Isolation and identification of Campylobacter from poultry PCR methods PCR test m-PCR 1* m-PCR 2** PCR 3*** Primers Sequence (5´→3´) Target gene Size of PCR amplicon (bp) MD16S1 MD16S2 ATCTAATGGCTTAACCATTAAAC GGACGGTAACTAGTTTAGTAT T 16S rRNA (C. coli and C. jejuni) 857 MDmapA1 MDmapA2 CTATTTTATTTTTGAGTGCTTGTG GCTTTATTTGCCATTTGTTTTATTA mapA (C. jejuni) 589 COL3 MDCOL2 AATTGAAAATTGCTCCAACTATG TGATTTTATTATTTGTAGCAGCG ceuE (C. coli) 462 HIP400F HIP1134R GAAGAGGGTTTGGGTGGT AGCTAGCTTCGCATAATAACTTG hipO (C. jejuni) 735 CC18F CC519R GGTATGATTTCTACAAAGCGAGATA AAAGACTATCGTCGCGTG asp (C. coli) 500 CL55 CL632 ATGCAAGTCGAACGATGAAGCGAC CCACTCTAGATTACCAGT TTCCC 16S rRNA (C. lari) 579 * Denis M., Soumet C., Rivoal K., Ermel G., Blivet D., Salvat G., Colin P.: Development of a m-PCR assay for simultaneous identification of Campylobacter jejuni and C. coli. Lett. Appl. Microbiol. 1999, 29, 406-410. ** Linton D., Lawson A. J., Owen R. J., Stanley J.: PCR detection, identification to species level, and fingerprinting of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli direct from diarrheic samples. J. Clin. Microbiol. 1997, 35, 2568-2572. ***Oyarzabal O. A., Wesley I. V., Barbaree J. M., Lauerman L. H., Conner D. E.: Specific detection of Campylobacter lari by PCR. Journal of Microb. Methods, 29, 1997, 97-102. Multiplex PCR results M 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 M 500 bp → Lanes: 1 – C. jejuni and C. coli, 2 – C. coli, 3 - C. jejuni, 4 – E. coli EDL 933, 5 – negative control (H2O), 6 - C. jejuni and C. coli, 7 - C. coli, 8 – C. jejuni, 9 - E. coli EDL 933, 10 – negative control (H2O), M - 100 bp DNA marker Differentiation by molecular methods Method ERIC-PCR flaA typing RAPD-PCR PFGE Primer name Sequence (5´→3´) ERIC1R ERIC2 ATGTAAGCTCCTGGGATCAC AAGTAAGTGACTGGGGTGAGCG flaAF flaAR OPA-11 1254 Amplifictions conditions 94°C/4 min, 40 cycles: 25°C/45 s, 72°C/1 min, 94°C/45 s and 72°C/5 min GGATTTCGTATTAACACAAATGGTGC CTGTAGTAATCTTAAACATTTTG 94°C/5 min, 30 cycles:48°C/1 min, 72°C/2 min, 94°C/1 min and 72°C/5 min CAATCGCCGT CCGCAGCCAA 94°C/5 min, 40 cycles:37°C/1 min, 72°C/1 min, 94°C/1 min and 72°C/10 min SmaI, SacII and both ERIC-PCR results M 3 6 50 21 60 W7 W11 W18 W20 W25 W35 W40 W41 W47 M 70 80 90 100 C. j. 3 C. j. 6 C. j. W20 C. j. W25 C. j. W35 C. j. W7 C. j. W11 C. j. W18 C. j. 21 C. j. W47 C. j. W40 C. j. W41 RFLP/PFGE (SmaI) results 3 10 6 20 21 30 W7 W11 W18 40 50 M 60 W20 W25 W35 W40 W41 W47 70 80 90 100 C. j. W40 C. j. W41 C. j. W25 C. j. W35 C. j. 21 C. j. W7 C. j. W11 C. j. W18 C. j. W20 C. j. 3 C. j. 6 C. j. W47 Proficiency tests • Detection of Campylobacter in chicken matrix, organized by FEPAS, UK, November 2005 • Identification of Campylobacter, organized by WHO Global Salm-Surv, External Quality Assurance System, Denmark, October 2006 Selected publications • K. Wieczorek, J. Osek: Multiplex PCR assays for simultaneous identification of Campylobacter jejuni and C. coli. [in Polish]. Medycyna Weterynaryjna 2005, 61, 797 • K. Wieczorek, J. Osek: Campylobacter as a cause of gastrointestinal infections. A review. [in Polish]. Medycyna Weterynaryjna 2005, 61, 847 • K. Wieczorek, J. Osek: The usefulness of some selected PRC techniques in differentiating thermotolerant Campylobacter strains. [in Polish]. Zywnosc, Nauka, Technologia, Jakosc 2005, 45, 132 • K. Wieczorek, J. Osek: Prevalence of virulence markers in Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli obtained from chicken carcasses. [in Polish]. Zoonozy, 2005, 92 • K. Wieczorek, J. Osek: Identification of thermophilic Campylobacter jenuni and Campylobacter coli by multiplex PCR. Hygiena Alimentorum XXVII, 2006, 253 • K. Wieczorek, J. Osek: Differentiation of Campylobacter jejuni isolates by random amplified polymorphic DNA method. [in Polish]. Medycyna Weterynaryjna 2006, 62, 663 Contact Prof. Jacek Osek, DVM, PhD National Veterinary Research Institute Department of Hygiene of Food of Animal Origin Partyzantow 57 24-100 Pulawy, Poland Phone: +48 81 8863051 Fax: +48 81 8862595 E.mail: [email protected] www.piwet.pulawy.pl