| Literature DB >> 32664501 |
Maarit Oikarinen1, Lori Bertolet2, Antonio Toniolo3, Sami Oikarinen1, Jutta E Laiho1, Alberto Pugliese4, Richard E Lloyd2, Heikki Hyöty1,5.
Abstract
Using immunohistochemistry, enterovirus capsid proteins were demonstrated in pancreatic islets of patients with type 1 diabetes. Virus proteins are mainly located in beta cells, supporting the hypothesis that enterovirus infections may contribute to the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes. In samples of pancreatic tissue, enterovirus RNA was also detected, but in extremely small quantities and in a smaller proportion of cases compared to the enteroviral protein. Difficulties in detecting viral RNA could be due to the very small number of infected cells, the possible activity of PCR inhibitors, and the presence-during persistent infection-of the viral genome in unencapsidated forms. The aim of this study was twofold: (a) to examine if enzymes or other compounds in pancreatic tissue could affect the molecular detection of encapsidated vs. unencapsidated enterovirus forms, and (b) to compare the sensitivity of RT-PCR methods used in different laboratories. Dilutions of encapsidated and unencapsidated virus were spiked into human pancreas homogenate and analyzed by RT-PCR. Incubation of pancreatic homogenate on wet ice for 20 h did not influence the detection of encapsidated virus. In contrast, a 15-min incubation on wet ice dramatically reduced detection of unencapsidated forms of virus. PCR inhibitors could not be found in pancreatic extract. The results show that components in the pancreas homogenate may selectively affect the detection of unencapsidated forms of enterovirus. This may lead to difficulties in diagnosing persisting enterovirus infection in the pancreas of patients with type 1 diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: RT-PCR; enterovirus; pancreas; type 1 diabetes; virus detection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32664501 PMCID: PMC7411921 DOI: 10.3390/v12070747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Overview of the preparation of pancreas homogenate dilutions spiked with coxsackievirus B1 (CVB1) and coxsackievirus A6 (CVA6).
Enterovirus primer pairs used in different laboratories and in different methods.
| Laboratory | Method | EV Group | Forward Primer | Reverse Primer | Probe | Location in the Genome * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houston | PCR 1 | 5′UTR-A-D | CGGCCCCTGAATGCGGCTAA | GAAACACGGACACCCAAAGTA | 449–563 | |
| Tampere | PCR 1 | 5′UTR-A-D | CGGCCCCTGAATGCGGCTAA | GAAACACGGACACCCAAAGTA | TAITCGGTTCCGCTGC | 449–563 |
| PCR 2 | 5′UTR-A-D | CGGCCCCTGAATGCGGCTAA | GAAACACGGACACCCAAAGTA | FAM-TCTGTGGCG GAA CCGACTA-TAMRA | 449–563 | |
| Varese | PCR 1 and 2 | 5′UTR-A | GTGTAGATCAGGTCGATGAGTCAC | ATTGTCACCATAAGCAGCCA | 306–597 | |
| 5′UTR-B | GACCAAGCACTTCTGTTACCC | GTCACCATAAGCAGCCAATATA | 161–594 | |||
| 5′UTR-C | GGTGTGAAGAGCCTATTGAGC | GATTGTCACCATAAGCAGCCA | 413–598 | |||
| 5′UTR-D | TGGTCCAGGCTGCGTT | AACACGGACACCCAAAGTAGT | 351–561 |
* Reference: EV68 GenBank accession no. AY426531; EV (enterovirus); UTR (untranslated region).
Sensitivity of different RT-PCT methods to detect coxsackievirus B1 (CVB1) and coxsackievirus A6 (CVA6) in different sample types. The result indicates the most diluted sample where the RT-PCR gave a positive result.
| Houston | Tampere | Varese | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | PCR 1 | PCR 1 | PCR 2 | PCR 1 | PCR 2 |
| CVB1 in water | 10−7 | 10−9 | 10−9 | 10−6 | n.a. |
| CVB1 in pancreas extract | 10−8 | 10−9 | 10−9 | 10−9 | 10−9 |
| CVB1 in pancreas extract, 20 h on ice | 10−8 | 10−8 | 10−8 | 10−9 | 10−9 |
| CVA6 in pancreas extract | 10−7 | 10−7 | 10−7 | 10−8 | 10−9 |
Figure 2(A) The experimental procedure of diluting infected or cells transfected with viral RNA into a background of untreated cells and pancreas extract. (B) Comparison of recovery of three forms of viral RNA from in pancreas extract treatment. Intact CVB3 virions, CVB3-infected cells, or TD-CVB3 transfected cells across a range of dilutions of infected/transfected cells in a background of untreated cells were treated with pancreatic extract before RNA extraction and recovery. RT-PCR results are converted from Ct (threshold cycle) to genomes using a standard curve established with known quantities of viral RNA. RT-PCR assay with SYBR green has an effect on endpoint Ct, which, when converted on standard curves (dashed line), indicates an effective lowest level of detection in assay. Cell Cont represents assay results from untreated cells. The calculated input of virus genomes in each experiment is shown in white bars. The red arrows indicate expected loss of virus signal from virus not adsorbed by cells during the 1-h infection incubation and washing step.
Figure 3Detection of viral RNA from cells infected with CVB3 or transfected with equivalent genome copies of wild-type CVB3 RNA or truncated TD-CVB3 RNA. After infection or transfection for 6 h in the presence (A) or absence (B) of guanidine–HCl, the cells were diluted into non-transfected cells (as described in Figure 2A), treated with pancreas extract for 15 min on ice before extraction. RT-PCR analysis was the same as described for Figure 2B. Dashed line indicates effective limit of detection from standard curves and negative controls.