| Literature DB >> 30571742 |
Krista M Milich1,2, Benjamin J Koestler3, Joe H Simmons4, Pramod N Nehete4, Anthony Di Fiore2, Lawrence E Williams4, Jaquelin P Dudley3, John Vanchiere5, Shelley M Payne3.
Abstract
A strain of Zika virus (ZIKV) of Asian origin associated with birth defects and neurological disorders has emerged and spread through the Americas. ZIKV was first isolated in the blood of nonhuman primates in Africa and has been detected in the blood, saliva, and urine of a few catarrhine species in both Africa and Asia, suggesting that nonhuman primates may serve as both a source and a reservoir of the virus. The recent introduction of ZIKV to human populations in the Americas presents the potential for the virus to spread into nonhuman primate reservoirs. Thus, it is critical to develop efficient and noninvasive detection methods to monitor the spread of the virus in wild nonhuman primate populations. Here, we describe a method for ZIKV detection in noninvasively collected fecal samples of a Neotropical primate. Fecal samples were collected from two captive squirrel monkeys (Saimiri boliviensis boliviensis) that were experimentally infected with ZIKV (Strain Mexico_1_44) and an additional two uninfected squirrel monkeys. Nucleic acids were extracted from these samples, and RT-qPCR was used to assay for the presence of ZIKV using primers flanking a 101 bp region of the NS5 gene. In both ZIKV-inoculated animals, ZIKV was detected 5-11 days post-infection, but was not detected in the uninfected animals. We compare the fecal results to ZIKV detection in serum, saliva, and urine samples from the same individuals. Our results indicate that fecal detection is a cost-effective, noninvasive method for monitoring wild populations of Neotropical primates as possible ZIKV reservoirs.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30571742 PMCID: PMC6301608 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Sequence of primers and probe.
| Sequence | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Forward | 5’ | 3’ | |
| Probe | 5’ | 3’ | |
| Reverse | 5’ | 3’ |
Fig 1ZIKV plaque formation Vero cells.
Amniotic fluid and placental supernatant were collected by C-section from animal #5574 at 26 days post infection (dpi) following detection of intrauterine fetal demise. Amniotic fluid added to Vero cell monolayers produced no observable lesions, whereas placental supernatant produced plaques. Monolayers were stained with crystal violet, and images were taken with a 10x objective.
Fig 2(A) A representative standard curve for ZIKV detection by RT-qPCR. A portion of the ZIKV NS5 gene synthesized in vitro was used to generate a RT-qPCR standard curve using SYBR-Green. A non-linear regression was used to determine correlation (R2 = 0.99). (B) RNA was extracted from the serum sampled from two experimentally infected non-human primates over time, and ZIKV was quantified using RT-qPCR. ZIKV was detected between 3–15 dpi. Gray symbols indicate ZIKV at levels outside the range of the standard curve. No ZIKV was detected at 59 dpi.
Fig 3ZIKV was quantified in saliva (A) and urine (B) samples from experimentally infected non-human primates using SYBR-green RT-qPCR. ZIKV was detected between days 5–15 in saliva, and on day 11 in urine. These data are representative of two experiments from independent RNA extractions. Gray symbols indicate ZIKV at levels outside the range of the standard curve. No ZIKV was detected at 59 dpi in either saliva or urine.
Fig 4ZIKV was quantified in fecal samples from experimentally infected non-human primates using RT-qPCR.
(A) SYBR-green was used to quantify ZIKV in fecal samples. ZIKV was detected between 7–11 dpi. (B) Taqman was used to quantify ZIKV in fecal samples. ZIKV was detected between 5–11 dpi. Gray symbols indicate ZIKV at levels outside the range of the standard curve. No ZIKV was detected at 59 dpi using either SYBR-Green or Taqman, and no ZIKV was detected in feces of uninfected individuals.