Cargando…

Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples

Surveillance of highly pathogenic viruses circulating in both human and animal populations is crucial to unveil endemic infections and potential zoonotic reservoirs. Monitoring the burden of disease by serological assay could be used as an early warning system for imminent outbreaks as an increased...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Surtees, Rebecca, Stern, Daniel, Ahrens, Katharina, Kromarek, Nicole, Lander, Angelika, Kreher, Petra, Weiss, Sabrina, Hewson, Roger, Punch, Emma K., Barr, John N., Witkowski, Peter T., Couacy-Hymann, Emmanuel, Marzi, Andrea, Dorner, Brigitte G., Kurth, Andreas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7641473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33095766
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008699
_version_ 1783605925787992064
author Surtees, Rebecca
Stern, Daniel
Ahrens, Katharina
Kromarek, Nicole
Lander, Angelika
Kreher, Petra
Weiss, Sabrina
Hewson, Roger
Punch, Emma K.
Barr, John N.
Witkowski, Peter T.
Couacy-Hymann, Emmanuel
Marzi, Andrea
Dorner, Brigitte G.
Kurth, Andreas
author_facet Surtees, Rebecca
Stern, Daniel
Ahrens, Katharina
Kromarek, Nicole
Lander, Angelika
Kreher, Petra
Weiss, Sabrina
Hewson, Roger
Punch, Emma K.
Barr, John N.
Witkowski, Peter T.
Couacy-Hymann, Emmanuel
Marzi, Andrea
Dorner, Brigitte G.
Kurth, Andreas
author_sort Surtees, Rebecca
collection PubMed
description Surveillance of highly pathogenic viruses circulating in both human and animal populations is crucial to unveil endemic infections and potential zoonotic reservoirs. Monitoring the burden of disease by serological assay could be used as an early warning system for imminent outbreaks as an increased seroprevalance often precedes larger outbreaks. However, the multitude of highly pathogenic viruses necessitates the need to identify specific antibodies against several targets from both humans as well as from potential reservoir animals such as bats. In order to address this, we have developed a broadly reactive multiplex microsphere immunoassay (MMIA) for the detection of antibodies against several highly pathogenic viruses from both humans and animals. To this aim, nucleoproteins (NP) of Ebola virus (EBOV), Marburg virus (MARV) and nucleocapsid proteins (NP) of Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever virus, Rift Valley fever virus and Dobrava-Belgrade hantavirus were employed in a 5-plex assay for IgG detection. After optimisation, specific binding to each respective NP was shown by testing sera from humans and non-human primates with known infection status. The usefulness of our assay for serosurveillance was shown by determining the immune response against the NP antigens in a panel of 129 human serum samples collected in Guinea between 2011 and 2012 in comparison to a panel of 88 sera from the German blood bank. We found good agreement between our MMIA and commercial or in-house reference methods by ELISA or IIFT with statistically significant higher binding to both EBOV NP and MARV NP coupled microspheres in the Guinea panel. Finally, the MMIA was successfully adapted to detect antibodies from bats that had been inoculated with EBOV- and MARV- virus-like particles, highlighting the versatility of this technique and potentially enabling the monitoring of wildlife as well as human populations with this assay. We were thus able to develop and validate a sensitive and broadly reactive high-throughput serological assay which could be used as a screening tool to detect antibodies against several highly pathogenic viruses.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7641473
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-76414732020-11-16 Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples Surtees, Rebecca Stern, Daniel Ahrens, Katharina Kromarek, Nicole Lander, Angelika Kreher, Petra Weiss, Sabrina Hewson, Roger Punch, Emma K. Barr, John N. Witkowski, Peter T. Couacy-Hymann, Emmanuel Marzi, Andrea Dorner, Brigitte G. Kurth, Andreas PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Surveillance of highly pathogenic viruses circulating in both human and animal populations is crucial to unveil endemic infections and potential zoonotic reservoirs. Monitoring the burden of disease by serological assay could be used as an early warning system for imminent outbreaks as an increased seroprevalance often precedes larger outbreaks. However, the multitude of highly pathogenic viruses necessitates the need to identify specific antibodies against several targets from both humans as well as from potential reservoir animals such as bats. In order to address this, we have developed a broadly reactive multiplex microsphere immunoassay (MMIA) for the detection of antibodies against several highly pathogenic viruses from both humans and animals. To this aim, nucleoproteins (NP) of Ebola virus (EBOV), Marburg virus (MARV) and nucleocapsid proteins (NP) of Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever virus, Rift Valley fever virus and Dobrava-Belgrade hantavirus were employed in a 5-plex assay for IgG detection. After optimisation, specific binding to each respective NP was shown by testing sera from humans and non-human primates with known infection status. The usefulness of our assay for serosurveillance was shown by determining the immune response against the NP antigens in a panel of 129 human serum samples collected in Guinea between 2011 and 2012 in comparison to a panel of 88 sera from the German blood bank. We found good agreement between our MMIA and commercial or in-house reference methods by ELISA or IIFT with statistically significant higher binding to both EBOV NP and MARV NP coupled microspheres in the Guinea panel. Finally, the MMIA was successfully adapted to detect antibodies from bats that had been inoculated with EBOV- and MARV- virus-like particles, highlighting the versatility of this technique and potentially enabling the monitoring of wildlife as well as human populations with this assay. We were thus able to develop and validate a sensitive and broadly reactive high-throughput serological assay which could be used as a screening tool to detect antibodies against several highly pathogenic viruses. Public Library of Science 2020-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7641473/ /pubmed/33095766 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008699 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Surtees, Rebecca
Stern, Daniel
Ahrens, Katharina
Kromarek, Nicole
Lander, Angelika
Kreher, Petra
Weiss, Sabrina
Hewson, Roger
Punch, Emma K.
Barr, John N.
Witkowski, Peter T.
Couacy-Hymann, Emmanuel
Marzi, Andrea
Dorner, Brigitte G.
Kurth, Andreas
Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples
title Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples
title_full Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples
title_fullStr Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples
title_full_unstemmed Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples
title_short Development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples
title_sort development of a multiplex microsphere immunoassay for the detection of antibodies against highly pathogenic viruses in human and animal serum samples
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7641473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33095766
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008699
work_keys_str_mv AT surteesrebecca developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT sterndaniel developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT ahrenskatharina developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT kromareknicole developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT landerangelika developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT kreherpetra developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT weisssabrina developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT hewsonroger developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT punchemmak developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT barrjohnn developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT witkowskipetert developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT couacyhymannemmanuel developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT marziandrea developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT dornerbrigitteg developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples
AT kurthandreas developmentofamultiplexmicrosphereimmunoassayforthedetectionofantibodiesagainsthighlypathogenicvirusesinhumanandanimalserumsamples