| Literature DB >> 32442180 |
Yugal Raj Bindari1, Stephen W Walkden-Brown1, Priscilla F Gerber1.
Abstract
Molecular-based testing of poultry dust has been used as a fast, sensitive and specific way to monitor viruses in chicken flocks but it provides no information on viral viability. Differentiation of viable and nonviable virus would expand the usefulness of PCR-based detection. This study tested three treatments (1. DNAse, 2. propidium monoazide [PMA], 3. immunomagnetic separation [IMS]) applied to dust or virus stock prior to nucleic acid extraction for their ability to exclude nonviable virus from PCR amplification. Infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) was used as a model. These treatments assume loss of viral viability due to damage to the capsid or to denaturation of epitope proteins. DNAse and PMA assess the integrity of the capsid to penetration by enzyme or intercalating dye, while IMS assesses the integrity of epitope proteins. Treatments were evaluated for their ability to reduce PCR signal, measured as ILTV log10 genomic copies (ILTV GC), of heat and chemically inactivated ILTV in poultry dust and virus stock. Compared to untreated dust samples, there was an overall reduction of 1.7 ILTV GC after IMS treatment (p<0.01), and a reduction of 2.0 ILTV GC after PMA treatment (p<0.0001). DNAse treatment did not reduce ILTV GC in dust (p = 0.68). Compared to untreated virus stocks, there was an overall reduction of 0.5 ILTV GC after DNAse treatment (p = 0.04), a reduction of 1.8 ILTV GC after IMS treatment (p<0.001) and a reduction of 1.4 ILTV GC after PMA treatment (p<0.0001). None of the treatments completely suppressed the detection of inactivated ILTV GC. In conclusion, treatments that use capsid integrity or protein epitope denaturation as markers to assess ILTV infectivity are unsuitable to accurately estimate proportions of viable virus in poultry dust and virus stocks.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32442180 PMCID: PMC7244108 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0232571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of experiments carried out and treatments and methods used in each experiment.
Chick embryo or cell culture assays were used to titrate the infectivity of samples used. Pre-DNA extraction treatments (DNAse, PMA, IMS) were then tested to assess their ability to prevent qPCR amplification of DNA from inactivated ILTV.
| Experiments | Pre-DNA extraction treatments | Sample material | Inactivation method | Test method | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Virus stock | Field dust | Spiked dust | Heat | Freeze thaw | Heat + Freeze thaw | Virkon S | Proteinase K | Triton X | Cell culture | qPCR | Egg embryo inoculation | ||
| EGG 1 | |||||||||||||
| EGG 2 | |||||||||||||
| DNAse 1 | DNAse | ||||||||||||
| DNAse 2 | DNAse | ||||||||||||
| PMA 1 | PMA | ||||||||||||
| PMA 2 | PMA | ||||||||||||
| IMS 1 | IMS | ||||||||||||
| IMS 2 | IMS | ||||||||||||
| IMS 3 | IMS | ||||||||||||
aInfectivity of the ILTV in field dust or spiked dust were tested in EGG- 1 and EGG-2 experiments and the same samples were used in all PMA and IMS experiments.
bCell culture was used to test the inactivation of heat treated virus stocks used in DNAse 1, PMA 1 and IMS 1.
Experiment EGG-2.
ILTV log10 GC in the inoculum and allantoic fluid of eggs inoculated with virus stock or an equivalent amount of stock spiked on dust samples subjected or not to drying at 30°C for 24 h and two freeze-thaw cycles.
| Sample | Sample treatment | LSM ± SE ILTV log10 GC/reaction of inoculum | LSM ± SE ILTV log10 GC/reaction of allantoic fluid (N. positive /total) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virus stocks | Nil | 7.62 ± 0.66A, | (4/4) 8.81 ± 0.57A |
| Spiked dust | Nil | 7.82 ± 0.66A | (4/4) 6.61± 0.57A |
| Spiked dust | Drying | 6.88 ± 0.66A | (3/4) 2.49 ± 0.57B |
| Spiked dust | Drying plus freeze-thaw | 6.79 ± 0.66A | (4/4) 3.78 ± 0.57B |
1Superscripts (ABC) not sharing the same letter denote difference (p <0.05) between the samples