| Literature DB >> 15147587 |
Remy N Charrel1, Bernard La Scola, Didier Raoult.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The limited circulation of many of the agents that are likely to be used in a bioterrorism attack precludes the ready availability of positive controls. This means that only specialized laboratories can screen for the presence of these agents by nucleic amplification assays. Calibrated controls are also necessary for quantitative measurements. Primers and probes to be used in both conventional and real-time PCR assays were designed for the detection of agents likely to be used by a bioterrorist. Three plasmids, each of which contains 4 to 6 specific sequences from agents on the CDC Category A and B list (excluding RNA viruses) were constructed. Two plasmids incorporate the sequences of Category A and B agents, respectively. The third plasmid incorporates sequences from Variola major and organisms that cause rash-like illnesses that may be clinically confused with smallpox. An "exogenic sequence", introducing a NotI restriction site was incorporated in the native sequences of the bioterrorism agents inserted in plasmids. The designed molecular system for detection of bioterrorism agents was tested on each of these agents (except Monkeypox virus, Smallpox virus and 2 Burkholderia species for which no native DNA was available) and a collection of 50 isolates of C. burnetii using constructed plasmids as positive controls.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15147587 PMCID: PMC425577 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-4-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Genes and specific primers used for amplification of Bioterrorism agents. Bioterrorism agents are classified according to CDC recommendations. Their presence in the 3 constructed plasmids is given.
| Agent | ||||||
| Bacteria | ||||||
| Bacillus anthracis | A | CatA | AF065404 | 5'-AGGCTCGAACTGGAGTGAA-3' | 5'-CCGCCTTTCTACCAGATTT-3' | |
| A | CatA | M27820 | 5'-ATGGAGCTTATACCGGAAAC-3' | 5'-GCGATACTGGCCTGCAAG-3' | ||
| A | CatA | AF097542 | 5'-TAATAATTTCATTGCTCCTTTTG-3' | 5'-TTCTATCTTGAGGACCCCAA-3' | ||
| B | CatB | L27997 | 5'-CCGGTGAACTGGCTAATCT-3' | 5'-TGAAGAATAGAGCGAGGCAA-3' | ||
| B | CatB | AF11790 | 5'-GACGCTGGCGCTGTCGA-3' | 5'-CGGCTTGTTGACCGCGTT-3' | ||
| B | CatB | U82287 | ||||
| B | CatB | AF269265 | 5'-ATTGCTTCGATTCAGATCAAC-3' | 5'-ACCAGTGATTGACCATTTGT-3' | ||
| B | CatB | M74242 | 5'-CTTTTTACCGACTCCGCAAA-3' | 5'-ACGAGCGTTGACAGTGCTT-3' | ||
| B | CatB | AF161079 | 5'-GCTCTTATGAATAATAATGCTC-3' | 5'-TGTTGTAACGCAGCATTAACA-3' | ||
| B | CatB | U83451 | 5'-TTTGGTGGAGCTCATAAGTTA-3' | 5'-GTACTATATTTGTTGTATTAAAAG-3' | ||
| - | CatVEF | AF123707 | 5'-TTGGTGGGAATAATTGTAATGT-3' | 5'-TGCAGCAAAATTGAATTCTG-3' | ||
| Viruses | ||||||
| A | CatA, CatVEF | AF377893 | 5'-GACKTCSGGACCAATTACTA-3' | 5'-TTGATTTAGTAGTGACAATTTCA-3' | ||
| - | CatVEF | AF375114 | 5'-AAAGTAGATTATGAAGAATACTC-3' | 5'-CAGAAATAGTTTCGACAATTTCA-3' | ||
| - | CatVEF | AF377892 | 5'-ACCAAGGATAAARTATCWTACG-3' | 5'-ATAYATAAGTACCCGGCATCT-3' | ||
| - | CatVEF | X04370 | 5'-GGTTAAACGTTTGAATCCATC-3' | 5'-CAGCAGACTTTCTCGAACG-3' | ||
| - | CatVEF | X14112 | 5'-CCGACCCGGAGAGGGAC-3' | 5'-CCAGGCGCTTGTTGGTGT-3' | ||
Sequence of probes used for hybridization in real time PCR assays
| Variola virus | 5'-AAGATCATACAGTCACAGACACTGT-3' |
| 5'-TACCGCAAATTCAAGAAACAACTGC-3' | |
| 5'-TTGCAAATACTTATAGCGCTTTGACT-3' | |
| 5'-AAGGAGTGCGGGTAATAGGTTATAA-3' | |
| 5'-AACCAGCGCGCTGTCCGCGAC-3' | |
| 5'-ATGAAATCTAGAAAATCTTGTGGTGTA-3' | |
| 5'-ATCATTTCGGCTCGGGATGGGC-3' | |
| 5'-AATGGCAAGCAACTCGTCCTTTAC-3' | |
| 5'-TGGTTCTATTCAGTTAGATGGGAGT-3' | |
| 5'-TATATTGTTCAAAGGAGCGGGAGAT-3' | |
| Monkeypox virus | 5'-TTGATTGTAAATACAGATAGTGAATCG-3' |
| Orthopoxvirus | 5'-TCCATACGATGATCTAGTTACAACTA-3' |
| Varicella-zoster virus | 5'-ATGCCACCTTTACAGTTGGAGGAA-3' |
| Herpes simplex virus 1 and 2 | 5'-ACCGCCGAACTGAGCAGACACC-3' |
| 5'-ACGTCTTATGGCAGGAACAAATTTAG-3' |
Figure 1Schematic representation of plasmid CatA This plasmid contains specific sequences of category A agents of bioterrorism (green/white/pink), exogenic sequences (yellow/blue) with inserted NotI site (blue). Primers (green) have been designed to amplifiate agent specific sequences and probes (pink) to detect specifically each sequences.
Figure 2Construction of DNA control plasmid designed for the 4 CDC Category A DNA agents (Smallpox virus [seq1], Assembling of the smallpox virus and B. anthracis sequences is presented as an example. Successive steps are indicated by framed numbers. 1, PCR amplification of the two matrix sequences by primers consisting of the stabilization and the restriction site sequences (italics). PCR reactions were carried out in a volume of 50 μl that included 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 9.0], 1.5 mM MgCl2, 50 mM KCl, 0.1% Triton X-100, 200 μM each dNTP, 0.4 μM of each oligonucleotide primer, 0.4 μM of the single stranded DNA, and 1.5 U of Taq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen, Cergy-Pontoise, France). The thermocycler (Biometra, Göttingen, Germany) profile was 5 min at 95°C, followed by 35 cycles of 30 sec at 95°C, 30 sec at 55°C, and 1 min at 72°C, and terminated by a final extension for 7 min at 72°C. PCR products were electrophorezed in 3% TAE-agarose gel containing ethidium bromide and visualized under UV transillumination. Column purification of the PCR products. PCR products of the expected size were column-purified by using the QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions, and eluted in 50 μl of RNase free distillated water. When two bands or more were observed by gel analysis, the band of expected size was excised from the gel and purified by glass milk extraction with the GenClean III Kit (Q-Bio-Gene, Carlsbad CA, USA). 2, assemblage was conducted by pair, seq1 with seq2 (resulting in seq1-2). Equal volumes (10 μl) of purified seq1- and seq2-dsDNA were incubated at 37°C in the presence of Sac I. Sac I site is located at the 3' and 5' ends of seq1 and seq2, respectively. 3, the reaction product was column purified using the protocol aforementioned to discard the 15-nt DNA fragments corresponding to the 5' and 3' ends to avoid their re-ligation to their respective complementary sequences at step 5. 4, Overnight incubation at 4°C in the presence of T4 DNA ligase. Ten μl of the reaction was incubated with T4 DNA ligase (Roche, Basel, Switzerland) according to the manufaturer's instructions. 5, PCR amplification by using the external primers (italics) was performed according to the protocol described at step 1. Then column purification using the protocol detailed at step 2 of the resulting PCR product. At this step the seq1-2 PCR product may be cloned into PGEM-T for storage. The same procedure was performed for seq3 and seq4. Ultimately, seq1-2 and seq3-4 were assembled by using the same protocol (sections 1–9). The final product cloned into PGEM-T plasmid includes seq1-2-3-4 flanked by the two Sseq and restriction sites.
Figure 3Molecular detection and identification of true and false positives using plasmid CatA as positive control. 3a. NotI predigestion of CatA plasmid DNA. A, B, C, D correspond to Not I digested-CatA plasmid DNA (overnight digestion with 10 U followed by an 1-hour digestion with another 10 U) respectively PCR amplified with Y. pestis, F. tularensis, B. anthracis, and smallpox virus oligonucleotide primers. E, F, G, H correspond to the same DNA samples which have not been digested by NotI. 3b. Discrimination of Y. pestis amplicons by NotI post-PCR digestion in a 3% agarose gel. lane I, NotI post-PCR digestion of amplicon from Y. pestis native DNA (101 bp); lane J, amplicon from CatA plasmid DNA (113 bp); lane K, NotI post-PCR digestion of amplicon from CatA plasmid DNA (digestion result in 2 products of 76 bp and 37 bp, respectively; only the 76 bp product is seen). 3c. Melting curves obtained from SYBR Green Light Cycler reactions. Curve A was obtained with CatA plasmid DNA and Y. pestis primers; curve B was obtained with Y. pestis DNA amplified with Y. pestis specific primers; curve C was obtained with Y. pestis DNA amplified in a multiplex reaction including the 8 primers specific for the category A agents (Y. pestis, F. tularensis, B. anthracis, smallpox virus). The melting temperature observed with A is 82.65 whereas it is 81.97 with native Y. pestis DNA (curves B and C).
Sensitivity of the detection tests performed onto the Light Cycler platform. For Smallpox virus, Monkey pox virus and Burkholderia species, native DNA was not available. For C. psittaci and Varicella-zoster virus titrated micro-organisms were not available.
| CatA | 5 | NA | |
| CatA | 5 | 5 (Kim5) | |
| CatA | 5 | 5 (Sneath D455) | |
| CatA | 500 | 5 (URFTMUE1) | |
| CatB | 50 | 50 ( | |
| CatB | 50 | 100 (Brein l) | |
| CatB | 100 | 50 (VR 891) | |
| CatB | 50 | NA | |
| CatB | 5 | 100 (Nine Mile) | |
| CatB | 50 | NA | |
| CatVEF | 5 | NA | |
| CatVEF | 5 | NA | |
| CatVEF | 5 | 10 (ectromelia TC8) | |
| CatVEF | 5 | NA | |
| CatVEF | 5 | 10 (MA1) | |
| CatVEF | 5 | 50 (Kaplan) | |