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A Sensitive Assay for Virus Discovery in Respiratory Clinical Samples

In 5–40% of respiratory infections in children, the diagnostics remain negative, suggesting that the patients might be infected with a yet unknown pathogen. Virus discovery cDNA-AFLP (VIDISCA) is a virus discovery method based on recognition of restriction enzyme cleavage sites, ligation of adaptors...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: de Vries, Michel, Deijs, Martin, Canuti, Marta, van Schaik, Barbera D. C., Faria, Nuno R., van de Garde, Martijn D. B., Jachimowski, Loes C. M., Jebbink, Maarten F., Jakobs, Marja, Luyf, Angela C. M., Coenjaerts, Frank E. J., Claas, Eric C. J., Molenkamp, Richard, Koekkoek, Sylvie M., Lammens, Christine, Leus, Frank, Goossens, Herman, Ieven, Margareta, Baas, Frank, van der Hoek, Lia
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3025933/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21283679
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016118
Descripción
Sumario:In 5–40% of respiratory infections in children, the diagnostics remain negative, suggesting that the patients might be infected with a yet unknown pathogen. Virus discovery cDNA-AFLP (VIDISCA) is a virus discovery method based on recognition of restriction enzyme cleavage sites, ligation of adaptors and subsequent amplification by PCR. However, direct discovery of unknown pathogens in nasopharyngeal swabs is difficult due to the high concentration of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) that acts as competitor. In the current study we optimized VIDISCA by adjusting the reverse transcription enzymes and decreasing rRNA amplification in the reverse transcription, using hexamer oligonucleotides that do not anneal to rRNA. Residual cDNA synthesis on rRNA templates was further reduced with oligonucleotides that anneal to rRNA but can not be extended due to 3′-dideoxy-C6-modification. With these modifications >90% reduction of rRNA amplification was established. Further improvement of the VIDISCA sensitivity was obtained by high throughput sequencing (VIDISCA-454). Eighteen nasopharyngeal swabs were analysed, all containing known respiratory viruses. We could identify the proper virus in the majority of samples tested (11/18). The median load in the VIDISCA-454 positive samples was 7.2 E5 viral genome copies/ml (ranging from 1.4 E3–7.7 E6). Our results show that optimization of VIDISCA and subsequent high-throughput-sequencing enhances sensitivity drastically and provides the opportunity to perform virus discovery directly in patient material.