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Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants

For more than four decades the cause of most type A influenza virus infections of humans has been attributed to only two viral subtypes, A/H1N1 or A/H3N2. In contrast, avian and other vertebrate species are a reservoir of type A influenza virus genome diversity, hosting strains representing at least...

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Autores principales: Metzgar, David, Myers, Christopher A., Russell, Kevin L., Faix, Dennis, Blair, Patrick J., Brown, Jason, Vo, Scott, Swayne, David E., Thomas, Colleen, Stenger, David A., Lin, Baochuan, Malanoski, Anthony P., Wang, Zheng, Blaney, Kate M., Long, Nina C., Schnur, Joel M., Saad, Magdi D., Borsuk, Lisa A., Lichanska, Agnieszka M., Lorence, Matthew C., Weslowski, Brian, Schafer, Klaus O., Tibbetts, Clark
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2815781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20140251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008995
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author Metzgar, David
Myers, Christopher A.
Russell, Kevin L.
Faix, Dennis
Blair, Patrick J.
Brown, Jason
Vo, Scott
Swayne, David E.
Thomas, Colleen
Stenger, David A.
Lin, Baochuan
Malanoski, Anthony P.
Wang, Zheng
Blaney, Kate M.
Long, Nina C.
Schnur, Joel M.
Saad, Magdi D.
Borsuk, Lisa A.
Lichanska, Agnieszka M.
Lorence, Matthew C.
Weslowski, Brian
Schafer, Klaus O.
Tibbetts, Clark
author_facet Metzgar, David
Myers, Christopher A.
Russell, Kevin L.
Faix, Dennis
Blair, Patrick J.
Brown, Jason
Vo, Scott
Swayne, David E.
Thomas, Colleen
Stenger, David A.
Lin, Baochuan
Malanoski, Anthony P.
Wang, Zheng
Blaney, Kate M.
Long, Nina C.
Schnur, Joel M.
Saad, Magdi D.
Borsuk, Lisa A.
Lichanska, Agnieszka M.
Lorence, Matthew C.
Weslowski, Brian
Schafer, Klaus O.
Tibbetts, Clark
author_sort Metzgar, David
collection PubMed
description For more than four decades the cause of most type A influenza virus infections of humans has been attributed to only two viral subtypes, A/H1N1 or A/H3N2. In contrast, avian and other vertebrate species are a reservoir of type A influenza virus genome diversity, hosting strains representing at least 120 of 144 combinations of 16 viral hemagglutinin and 9 viral neuraminidase subtypes. Viral genome segment reassortments and mutations emerging within this reservoir may spawn new influenza virus strains as imminent epidemic or pandemic threats to human health and poultry production. Traditional methods to detect and differentiate influenza virus subtypes are either time-consuming and labor-intensive (culture-based) or remarkably insensitive (antibody-based). Molecular diagnostic assays based upon reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) have short assay cycle time, and high analytical sensitivity and specificity. However, none of these diagnostic tests determine viral gene nucleotide sequences to distinguish strains and variants of a detected pathogen from one specimen to the next. Decision-quality, strain- and variant-specific pathogen gene sequence information may be critical for public health, infection control, surveillance, epidemiology, or medical/veterinary treatment planning. The Resequencing Pathogen Microarray (RPM-Flu) is a robust, highly multiplexed and target gene sequencing-based alternative to both traditional culture- or biomarker-based diagnostic tests. RPM-Flu is a single, simultaneous differential diagnostic assay for all subtype combinations of type A influenza viruses and for 30 other viral and bacterial pathogens that may cause influenza-like illness. These other pathogen targets of RPM-Flu may co-infect and compound the morbidity and/or mortality of patients with influenza. The informative specificity of a single RPM-Flu test represents specimen-specific viral gene sequences as determinants of virus type, A/HN subtype, virulence, host-range, and resistance to antiviral agents.
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spelling pubmed-28157812010-02-07 Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants Metzgar, David Myers, Christopher A. Russell, Kevin L. Faix, Dennis Blair, Patrick J. Brown, Jason Vo, Scott Swayne, David E. Thomas, Colleen Stenger, David A. Lin, Baochuan Malanoski, Anthony P. Wang, Zheng Blaney, Kate M. Long, Nina C. Schnur, Joel M. Saad, Magdi D. Borsuk, Lisa A. Lichanska, Agnieszka M. Lorence, Matthew C. Weslowski, Brian Schafer, Klaus O. Tibbetts, Clark PLoS One Research Article For more than four decades the cause of most type A influenza virus infections of humans has been attributed to only two viral subtypes, A/H1N1 or A/H3N2. In contrast, avian and other vertebrate species are a reservoir of type A influenza virus genome diversity, hosting strains representing at least 120 of 144 combinations of 16 viral hemagglutinin and 9 viral neuraminidase subtypes. Viral genome segment reassortments and mutations emerging within this reservoir may spawn new influenza virus strains as imminent epidemic or pandemic threats to human health and poultry production. Traditional methods to detect and differentiate influenza virus subtypes are either time-consuming and labor-intensive (culture-based) or remarkably insensitive (antibody-based). Molecular diagnostic assays based upon reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) have short assay cycle time, and high analytical sensitivity and specificity. However, none of these diagnostic tests determine viral gene nucleotide sequences to distinguish strains and variants of a detected pathogen from one specimen to the next. Decision-quality, strain- and variant-specific pathogen gene sequence information may be critical for public health, infection control, surveillance, epidemiology, or medical/veterinary treatment planning. The Resequencing Pathogen Microarray (RPM-Flu) is a robust, highly multiplexed and target gene sequencing-based alternative to both traditional culture- or biomarker-based diagnostic tests. RPM-Flu is a single, simultaneous differential diagnostic assay for all subtype combinations of type A influenza viruses and for 30 other viral and bacterial pathogens that may cause influenza-like illness. These other pathogen targets of RPM-Flu may co-infect and compound the morbidity and/or mortality of patients with influenza. The informative specificity of a single RPM-Flu test represents specimen-specific viral gene sequences as determinants of virus type, A/HN subtype, virulence, host-range, and resistance to antiviral agents. Public Library of Science 2010-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2815781/ /pubmed/20140251 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008995 Text en This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Metzgar, David
Myers, Christopher A.
Russell, Kevin L.
Faix, Dennis
Blair, Patrick J.
Brown, Jason
Vo, Scott
Swayne, David E.
Thomas, Colleen
Stenger, David A.
Lin, Baochuan
Malanoski, Anthony P.
Wang, Zheng
Blaney, Kate M.
Long, Nina C.
Schnur, Joel M.
Saad, Magdi D.
Borsuk, Lisa A.
Lichanska, Agnieszka M.
Lorence, Matthew C.
Weslowski, Brian
Schafer, Klaus O.
Tibbetts, Clark
Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants
title Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants
title_full Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants
title_fullStr Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants
title_full_unstemmed Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants
title_short Single Assay for Simultaneous Detection and Differential Identification of Human and Avian Influenza Virus Types, Subtypes, and Emergent Variants
title_sort single assay for simultaneous detection and differential identification of human and avian influenza virus types, subtypes, and emergent variants
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2815781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20140251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008995
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