| Literature DB >> 30859085 |
José M Rojas1, Daniel Rodríguez-Martín1, Verónica Martín1, Noemí Sevilla1.
Abstract
This review provides an overview of current and potential new diagnostic techniques against bluetongue virus (BTV), an Orbivirus transmitted by arthropods that affects ruminants. Bluetongue is a disease currently notifiable to the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), causing great economic losses due to decreased trade associated with bluetongue outbreaks and high mortality and morbidity. BTV cross-reacts with many antigenically related viruses including viruses that causes African Horse sickness and epizootic haemorrhagic disease of deer. Therefore, reliable diagnostic approaches to detect BTV among these other antigenically related viruses are used or being developed. The antigenic determinant for differentiation of virus species/serogroups among orbiviruses is the VP7 protein, meanwhile VP2 is serotype specific. Serologically, assays are established in many laboratories, based mainly on competitive ELISA or serum neutralization assay (virus neutralization assay [VNT]) although new techniques are being developed. Virus isolation from blood or semen is, additionally, another means of BTV diagnosis. Nevertheless, most of these techniques for viral isolation are time-consuming and expensive. Currently, reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) panels or real-time RT-PCR are widely used methods although next-generation sequencing remains of interest for future virus diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: bluetongue virus; diagnostic tests; serological tools; virus isolation
Year: 2019 PMID: 30859085 PMCID: PMC6385761 DOI: 10.2147/VMRR.S163804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Med (Auckl) ISSN: 2230-2034
Virus detection techniques
| Test | Status | Advantage | Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virus detection techniques | |||
| Immunofluorescence | In use | Complement the full pathogen characterization | Used mainly in experimental pathogenesis |
| Competitive ELISA (c-ELISA) | Used routinely in many laboratories | Highly sensitive technique | Detection of the presence of BTV antigens |
| Dot immunoblotting | Not widely used | Sensitive for serotypes 1–18 and 20 | Detection of virus |
| Electron microscopy | Not widely used for diagnosis | Identification of virus as well as cellular pathology caused by the virus | Diagnosis of unknown etiology virus |
| Standard RT-PCR | In use but replaced by real time RT-PCR | Sensitivity | Detection of BTV RNA |
| Real-time RT-PCR | In use | Analytically sensitive and reduced contamination | Detection of BTV RNA |
| Multiplex PCR | In use | Identified multiple serotypes simultaneously | Detection of BTV RNA |
| Sequencing | In use | Classification into serogroup, serotype, and topotype | Obtain full genomic sequence of BTV |
| Antibody detection techniques | |||
| Agar gel immunodiffusion | Into abeyance | Easy and quick to perform | Detection of BTV antigens |
| i-ELISA and c-ELISA | Most commonly used | Reliable and robust, commercially available | Detection of BTV antigens |
| VNT | Diminished use due to cost and labor | Very useful in epidemiology studies | Detection of serotype-specific antibodies |
| IgM-capture ELISA | Complementary to current tests | New technologies | Detection of BTV antibodies in recent infected cattle |
| Immunochromatographic strips | Not widely used | Rapid and high specificity | Detection of antibodies to VP7 |
| Protein chips | Not widely used | New technique under development | Detection of antibodies to VP7 |
| Latex agglutination test | Not widely used | New technique under development. Good for large number of samples | Detection of antibodies to VP7 |
| Double-antigen MIA | Not widely used | High specificity and efficiency compared with c-ELISA, while VP2-MIA was as specific as a VNT | Detection of antibodies to VP2 and VP7 simultaneously |
Abbreviations: BTV, bluetongue virus; i-ELISA, indirect ELISA; MIA, microsphere immunoassay; RT-PCR, reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction; VNT, virus neutralization assay.