Affiliation:
1. The
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North
Carolina
2. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta,
Georgia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We
have developed and evaluated the reverse transcription (RT)-PCR
detection of mRNA in cell culture to assay infectious adenoviruses
(Ads) by using Ad type 2 (Ad2) and Ad41 as models. Only infectious Ads
are detected because they are the only ones able to produce mRNA during
replication in cell culture. Three primer sets for RT-PCR amplification
of mRNA were evaluated for their sensitivity and specificity: a
conserved region of late mRNA transcript encoding a virion structural
hexon protein and detecting a wide range of human Ads and two primer
sets targeting a region of an early mRNA transcript that specifically
detects either Ad2 and Ad5 or Ad40 and Ad41. The mRNAs of infected A549
and Graham 293 cells were recovered from cell lysates with oligo(dT) at
different time periods after infection and treated with RNase-free
DNase to remove residual contaminating DNA, and then Ad mRNA was
detected by RT-PCR assay. The mRNA of Ad2 was detected as early as
6 h after infection at 10
6
infectious units (IU)
per cell culture and after longer incubation times at levels as low as
1 to 2 IU per cell culture. The mRNA of Ad41 was detected as soon as
24 h after infection at 10
6
IU per cell culture
and at levels as low as 5 IU per cell culture after longer incubation
times. To confirm the detection of only infectious viruses, it was
shown that no mRNA was detected from Ad2 and Ad41 inactivated by free
chlorine or high doses of collimated, monochromatic (254-nm) UV
radiation. Detection of Ad2 mRNA exactly coincided with the presence of
virus infectivity detected by cytopathogenic effects in cell cultures,
but mRNA detection occurred sooner. These results suggest that mRNA
detection by RT-PCR assay in inoculated cell cultures is a very
sensitive, specific, and rapid method by which to detect infectious Ads
in water and other environmental
samples.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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