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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 2002, p. 3635-3640, Vol. 40, No. 10
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.10.3635-3640.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Detection of Herpes Simplex Virus Type 2-Specific Immunoglobulin G Antibodies in African Sera by Using Recombinant gG2, Western Blotting, and gG2 Inhibition
Wayne Hogrefe,1* Xin Su,1 James Song,1 Rhoda Ashley,2 and Lilly Kong1
Focus Technologies, Cypress, California,1
Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington2
Received 13 May 2002/
Returned for modification 15 June 2002/
Accepted 21 July 2002

ABSTRACT
Sera (
n = 781) from four African countries were used to determine
the prevalence of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) antibodies
by using the HerpeSelect HSV-2 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA; Focus Technologies) and Western blotting (WB). Also,
an HSV inhibition assay was developed to evaluate the discordant
sample results between HerpesSelect and WB. The seroprevalence
of HSV-2 ranged from 17% in the South African panel to nearly
70% in panels from Kenya, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. Overall, HerpeSelect
was 100% sensitive and 88% specific compared to WB and 100%
sensitive and 96% specific compared to the inhibition assay.
There was 100% concordance among all three assays for samples
from South Africa and Zimbabwe. The discordant results occurred
in samples from Kenya and Uganda.

INTRODUCTION
The detection and differentiation of type-specific antibodies
to herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) and HSV-2 has been limited
to reference laboratories due to the limited laboratory tools
for HSV type-specific antibody testing. Tests such as the monoclonal
inhibition assay (
14) and Western blotting (WB) (
4,
6,
8) are
tedious and require a high level of expertise to perform. It
is now possible to take advantage of the immunological distinction
of the glycoproteins gG1 and gG2 of HSV-1 and HSV-2, respectively,
to differentiate type-specific HSV antibodies in an ELISA and
immunoblot format. Since both gG1 and gG2 proteins are highly
conserved in HSV, gG-based serology tests allow for the detection
of type-specific antibody in individuals infected with HSV (
1,
2,
7,
10,
12,
13). The development of gG-based serologic tests
allows for expanded seroprevalence and natural history studies
relating to HSV and genital herpes by facilitating the detection
of HSV type-specific antibodies in routine laboratory settings
worldwide.
Seroprevalence studies have been initiated worldwide to support potential vaccine trials, aid in antiviral treatment, monitor sexually transmitted disease (STD) trends, and assess the risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission in the presence of STD. To date, various studies have shown a high degree of concordance in the United States and Europe between gG-based serologic assays and "gold standard" assays such as the HSV WB assay performed at the University of Washington (UW) (3, 5, 11). Recently, an HSV seroprevalence study conducted in Africa raised concern that the recombinant gG2 (rgG2) ELISA may give false-positive results in certain African sera (E. Van Dyck, A. Buvé, D. Brown, and M. Loga, Abstr. 14th ISSTDR/17th IUSTI, Berlin, Germany, abstr. T079, 2001). The current study is the largest to date to evaluate the presence of HSV antibody using a rgG2 ELISA and WB from various geographic locations in Africa. It appears that certain samples present interpretation difficulties regardless of the assay method used to detect HSV type-specific antibodies. In order to evaluate samples giving discordant results with ELISA and WB, an HSV-2 inhibition assay was developed. The assay is based on the ability of native gG2 present in cell culture lysates to inhibit the binding of gG2-specific antibodies to rgG2. The inhibition assay, based on differential absorption of type-specific antibodies, allows the identification of sera yielding false-positive results. Although a high degree of concordance was found between rgG2 ELISA and WB in certain geographic locations, the discordant samples were limited to two countries. The inhibition assay allowed for a further characterization of the discordant sera.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Serum panels. (i) Kenya.
Two panels were obtained from Kenya for a total of 235 sera.
Kenya-A samples were HIV negative (
n = 150), and Kenya-B samples
were HIV positive (
n = 85). All samples were collected from
randomized women attending an outpatient clinic in Mombasa,
Kenya, as part of a vitamin A study. The median age of the women
was 26 years (range, 18 to 45 years). The sera were collected,
frozen, and shipped to the University of Washington for the
vitamin studies. The samples were subsequently used in this
study and, therefore, went through a second freeze-thaw cycle.
(ii) Uganda-A.
Fifty-one random sera were collected from a central blood bank (Nakasero) in Kampala in 1989 for an HIV seroprevalence study of blood donors. The sera were processed, frozen, and shipped to the University of California, Davis, for HIV serology studies. The samples were thawed for testing, aliquots were obtained, and the samples were refrozen until used in the present study.
(iii) Uganda-B.
A total of 176 serum samples were obtained from HIV-negative women between the ages of 18 to 35 who were recruited from urban family planning clinics. After the serum samples were obtained, they were immediately frozen and remained frozen during shipment. The samples were thawed only once prior to testing for this study.
(iv) South Africa.
A total of 150 sera were collected from Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, George, and Bloemfontein, South Africa, and from Namibia. The random samples were collected from healthy, primarily middle-income individuals for HIV screening. The sera were processed, frozen, and shipped directly to the California testing laboratory for this study. The samples were not thawed until immediately prior to testing.
(v) Zimbabwe.
A total of 174 sera were collected from healthy, HIV-negative women aged 18 to 35 attending an STD clinic in Harare as part of an HIV seroprevalence study. The sera were collected, aliquoted, and frozen. The frozen samples were shipped to the California testing laboratory for this study.
rgG2 HSV-2 ELISA.
Focus Technologies' HSV-2 HerpeSelect ELISA was used to screen all sera for the presence of HSV-2 antibody. The rgG2 antigen used in the assay is a column purified, baculovirus-derived, truncated gG2 protein propagated in Sf9 cells. All samples were run per the package insert that calls for a 1:101 dilution of serum, a 1-h serum incubation step, and a 30-min conjugate incubation step. An index value was obtained for each sample based on the absorbance of the patient sample divided by the absorbance of cutoff calibrator supplied by the HerpeSelect kit. An index value of <0.9 was negative, values from 0.9 to 1.1 were considered equivocal, and a value of >1.1 was positive.
HSV UW-WB.
The UW-WB has been previously described (4). Briefly, the WB banding pattern of sera against separate HSV-1 and HSV-2 strips was compared and evaluated. If necessary, the WB was repeated for problematic samples after absorption with HSV-1 and HSV-2 soluble antigens. A sample was considered "atypical" if either a definitive gG band is not present but the overall pattern is consistent with a type-specific HSV antibody or a limited banding pattern is present and suggests either HSV-1 or HSV-2 antibody.
gG2/HSV-2 inhibition assay design.
HSV-1 (MacIntyre strain) and HSV-2 (MS strain) were used to infect Vero cells. When the Vero cell monolayer was nearly 100% infected but prior to significant cell death, the infected monolayers were harvested by mechanical disruption, washed once in phosphate-buffered saline, and suspended in 1% Triton X-100-1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride-0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate-50 mM Tris (pH 8.0). The HSV-1 and HSV-2 detergent lysates were used at a final concentration of ca. 1 mg/ml. The serum samples were first diluted 1:50 in the HerpeSelect ELISA dilution buffer and then diluted with an equal volume of either the HSV-1 or the HSV-2 lysate and incubated for 1 h at room temperature on an orbital shaker. The preincubated samples were then added to recombinant gG2 ELISA wells and incubated for 1 h at room temperature, and the conjugate and chromogen were subsequently added. The index value of the HSV-1 lysate well was determined, as were the index values of the HSV-2 lysate well. The percent inhibition due to the preincubation with HSV-2 lysate was determined by using the following formula: [1 - (index of HSV-2 lysate well/index of HSV-1 lysate well)] x 100. The HSV-1 lysate reaction controlled for any non-HSV reactivity present in any sample so that the percent inhibition detected with the HSV-2 lysate was due only to the absorption of gG2 reactive antibodies.
As noted below, a limited number of HSV-2 ELISA-positive samples were tested in the inhibition assay at a final dilution of 1:400 and tested with a 2x concentration of the lysates at both 1:100 and 1:400 final dilutions. All other parameters of the inhibition assay were unchanged.

RESULTS
HSV-2 seroprevalence as determined by ELISA and WB.
Table
1 summarizes, by country, the HSV-2 seroprevalence as
determined by the two methods. Both the ELISA and WB methods
detected the same positive samples in the Zimbabwe panel (females,
HIV negative), in which 66% of the samples were positive for
HSV-2. The South African panel (males and females, HIV status
unknown) had the same HSV-2 seropositivity rate of 17% by both
the ELISA and WB. Four South African samples that were HSV-2
positive by ELISA had "atypical" patterns for HSV-2 by the WB.
The combined Kenyan panels (females: panel A, HIV negative;
panel B, HIV positive) had 76 and 70% seroprevalence rates as
determined by ELISA and WB, respectively, whereas the combined
Uganda panels (males and females, panel A, HIV status unknown;
panel B, females, HIV negative) had 78 versus 66% rates as determined
by ELISA and WB. The HSV-1 seroprevalence rate as determined
by WB was similar for the four countries: Kenya, 95%; South
Africa, 89%; Uganda, 100%; and Zimbabwe, 95%.
The detailed comparison of ELISA and WB results for the six
serum panels is given in Table
2. All 451 WB-positive samples
were also ELISA positive; therefore, the rgG2 ELISA was 100%
sensitive versus the WB. A total of 11 atypical WB samples (9
ELISA positive and 2 ELISA negative) were detected. The atypical
WB samples are discussed in greater detail below. Five samples
were equivocal with the ELISA, and all were WB negative. Of
the 497 ELISA-positive samples, 451 (91%) were WB positive,
9 (2%) were WB atypical, and 37 (7%) were WB negative, with
all of the 37 WB-negative, ELISA-positive samples coming from
the Kenyan and Ugandan panels. No HSV-2 ELISA-WB discordant
results were found with the samples from the Zimbabwe and South
African panels; therefore, 100% concordance was found between
the rgG2 ELISA and the WB for the 323 samples from these two
countries.
HSV-2 inhibition assay.
The inhibition assay was developed as a tool to investigate
the cause of the ELISA and WB discordant samples from the Uganda
and Kenya panels. Since the rgG2 ELISA uses a purified baculovirus-derived
recombinant protein, the use of native HSV antigens to inhibit
the binding of gG2 antibodies to the recombinant protein was
investigated as a way to discriminate gG2-specific from gG2-nonspecific
antibody binding. To determine the effectiveness of the differential
blocking abilities of HSV-1 lysate and HSV-2 lysate, 260 HSV-2-positive
samples that were concordant between the HerpeSelect and WB
for their HSV-2 results were evaluated. The 260 samples were
from the Kenya-A, South Africa, Uganda-A, and Zimbabwe panels.
Figure
1 compares the HSV-2 ELISA index value obtained for each
sample by using the standard HSV-2 ELISA assay with the index
value obtained after each sample was absorbed with either HSV-1
lysate or HSV-2 lysate. Each serum sample has two datum points
in Fig.
1: one datum point for the HSV-1 lysate preincubation
and a second datum point for the HSV-2 lysate preincubation.
As shown, all 260 samples had significant inhibition when preincubated
with HSV-2 lysate, with 253 of the 260 samples having post-HSV-2
preincubation index values of <1.0. However, none of the
260 samples had a significant decrease in the index value when
preincubated with HSV-1 lysate, and no samples had a post-HSV-1
preincubation index value of <2.3. Therefore, good discrimination
was found between the blocking of HSV-2 antibody binding to
rGg2 by HSV-2 lysate, whereas the HSV-1 lysate did not block
HSV-2 antibody binding to rgG2.
The differential reactivity obtained with HSV-1 and HSV-2 lysates
was used to establish cutoff criteria for the inhibition assay.
The percent inhibition due to preincubation with HSV-2 lysate
was determined by using the formula given previously. The use
of the HSV-1 lysate controlled for the loss of antibody binding
to gG2 due to factors other than native gG2 present in the HSV-2
lysate. Therefore, the calculated percent inhibition was only
due to the specific removal of gG2-reactive antibodies by the
HSV-2 lysate. The mean percent inhibition obtained by using
the 260 HSV-2-positive concordant samples was 91% with a standard
deviation (SD) of 10.6%; therefore, the cutoff values at 2 SD
and at 3 SD were 70 and 60%, respectively. Figure
2 demonstrates
the percent inhibition obtained with 417 ELISA-positive samples.
The 80 HSV-2 concordant samples from the Kenya-B panel were
not submitted for the inhibition assay. At the 60% (3 SD) inhibition
level, 402 of 417 (96.4%) ELISA-positive samples were confirmed
to be positive. Of the 37 WB-negative, ELISA-positive samples,
25 (68%) were confirmed to be HSV-2 positive in the inhibition
assay. The ELISA-WB-discrepant samples tended to have lower
antibody levels; 21 of 37 (57%) had index values of between
1.1 and 2.0, 9 of 37 (24%) had index values of between 2.1 and
3.0, and 7 of 37samples (19%) had index values of >3.0. The
25 WB-negative samples that were determined to be HSV-2 positive
by the inhibition assay had a mean inhibition of 70% compared
to the ELISA-WB-concordant positive samples that had a mean
inhibition of 92%. The two samples with the lowest percent inhibition
were found to be highly reactive for HSV immunoglobulin M (IgM)
as determined by a native-antigen ELISA (data not shown).
At high HSV-2 index values (index of >8.0) nine samples were
found to be both HSV-2 ELISA positive and WB positive but had
inhibition values of <65% (range, 22 to 65%); five of the
nine samples had inhibition levels below the 60% threshold.
It was possible that the inability to reach maximum inhibition
with these sera was due to antibody excess. To test for antibody
excess, eight of the samples were retested by incubating with
a 2
x concentration of HSV lysate and by diluting the samples
to 1:400 in addition to the standard 1:100 dilution. Both doubling
the HSV lysate concentration and increasing the sample dilution
to 1:400 had a similar effect on all eight samples tested. Five
of the eight samples had increased inhibition values at the
1:400 dilution as with the 2
x lysate concentration. Two of the
five samples with increased inhibition had initial inhibition
values of <60% that became >60% after the incubation parameters
were changed. These two samples then matched the results obtained
with WB and HerpeSelect. However, no enhanced inhibition was
exhibited by three of the samples, and the inhibition values
remained <60% for all of the inhibition assay parameters
tested. Although all three samples were WB and ELISA positive
for HSV-2, they were considered HSV-2 negative by the inhibition
assay. These three samples were the only discordant samples
between the WB and the inhibition assay at high (>6) index
values of the HerpeSelect ELISA.
Eleven samples gave atypical HSV-2 WB profiles. Nine of the eleven samples were ELISA positive, and two were ELISA negative (Table 3). All nine ELISA positive samples gave high inhibition values ranging from 73 to 95% (mean, 79%). It appears that most of the atypical HSV-2 WB samples are positive for HSV-2 antibodies. The samples giving atypical WB profiles were similar to the WB-ELISA-discordant samples in that the majority were found to be only slightly positive in the ELISA and tended to have lower inhibition values than the concordant samples.
Assay concordance.
The calculations to determine concordance, sensitivity, and
specificity of the ELISA results were based on 765 samples with
definitive test results. Eleven sera with atypical WB profiles
were considered to be HSV-2 positive for these calculations;
however, the five sera with equivocal results as determined
by ELISA were excluded from the calculations. As shown in Table
2, there was a 95.2% overall concordance between the ELISA and
WB results. The concordance, by country, was 88% for Uganda,
96% for Kenya, and 100% for both South Africa and Zimbabwe.
Table
4 summarizes the sensitivity and specificity of the ELISA
versus both WB and the inhibition assay. Using an ELISA index
value of

1.1 as an indication of a positive result, the sensitivity
was 99.6% versus both WB and the inhibition assay and the specificities
were 88 and 95% versus the WB and the inhibition assay, respectively.
Since the majority of the ELISA-WB-discordant samples from Uganda
and Kenya had low ELISA index values, the sensitivities and
specificities of the ELISA for all 765 samples were recalculated
by using higher index values as the cutoffs for a positive result.
Table
4 shows that incrementally increasing the index cutoff
value increased the specificity with only a modest impact on
the sensitivity. For example, with a 2.1 index value the sensitivity
decreased to 96%, whereas the specificity increased to 95% for
the entire study population. However, with an index of 2.1 for
only the Kenya and Uganda samples, the sensitivity decreased
to 97% but the specificity remained at 88%.

DISCUSSION
The HSV-2 inhibition assay was developed to investigate the
cause of the discordant results between the ELISA and WB methods.
The HSV-2-infected cell culture lysate inhibited binding of
ELISA-WB-concordant HSV-2-positive sera to the rgG2 in all 260
samples initially tested, whereas none of the 260 samples showed
significant inhibition of antibody binding to rgG2 when HSV-1
lysate alone was added to the assay. The use of HSV-1 lysate
in the inhibition assay controlled for any inhibitory effect
that was contributed by Vero cell antigens, denaturing agents,
ionic strength, HSV type-common antigens, and detergents present
in either the HSV-1 or HSV-2 lysates. Therefore, the only antigenic
differences between the HSV-1 and HSV-2 lysates are due to the
presence of HSV type-specific antigens. The mean percent inhibition
of the 260 concordant samples was 92% (SD = 10.6%); therefore,
>60% inhibition (mean, 3 SD) was considered significant.
Any ELISA-positive sample with an inhibition value of <60%
was considered a false-positive ELISA result. Based on the inhibition
assay, 25 of 37 (67%) discrepant samples were positive for HSV-2
antibodies (false negative by WB), and 12 (33%) were negative
for HSV-2 antibodies (false positive by ELISA). Only 3 of the
451 (0.7%) samples positive for HSV-2 by both the HerpeSelect
and WB assays had inhibition values of <60%.
There was a high level of overall concordance between the ELISA and inhibition assay (98%), whereas the concordance between the ELISA and WB assays was slightly lower at 95%. All 37 discordant samples were ELISA positive and WB negative and were limited geographically to Kenya and Uganda; the majority of the discordant samples were weakly positive as determined by the ELISA. The factors causing discordant results between the ELISA and WB methods were beyond the scope of the present study; however, there are several avenues for future studies to determine the source of the discordance. The ability of the two methods to detect early HSV-2 acquisition may account for some of the discordant results. Recently, Ashley et al. found that the HerpeSelect HSV-2 ELISA and the atypical HSV WB profile detected seroconversion in HSV-2 primary infection sooner than did the classic WB profile (R. L. Ashley, E. Krantz, and A. Wald, unpublished data). In the present study, 9 of 11 WB samples with atypical profiles were both HerpeSelect ELISA and inhibition ELISA positive for HSV-2. Also, two samples from Kenya with high ELISA index values and negative WB had high levels of HSV IgM, indicating possible recent exposure to HSV. It is possible that at least a portion of the ELISA- and WB-discordant samples could be due the recent acquisition of HSV-2 and to low levels of IgG being present, especially since the present study's population included young adult women from areas of high HSV-2 acquisition.
Another possible explanation may be the presence of antibodies to a non-HSV-2 virus that react to the rgG2. It is unlikely that this reactivity would be due to HSV-1 since all of the serum panels in the present study had a high incidence of HSV-1 antibody (88 to 100%). Also, the use of HSV-1 lysate in the inhibition assay as a baseline control for each sample tested would indicate that the antibody reactivity is probably limited to the reactivity to the gG2 protein. Few HSV-2 isolates are available from Africa, and none were collected in the present study to determine whether HSV-2 antigenic difference exist in this region. Although Liljeqvist et al. (9) found a gG2 epitope, as determined by using a monoclonal antibody, to be highly conserved among 2,400 HSV-2 isolates, these isolates were from northern Europe, and no studies have evaluated the relatedness of HSV-2 isolates in Africa. Lastly, the positive predictive value of HerpeSelect is high in the population studied; however, the high HSV-2 seroprevelance in most of the populations studied would favor a high positive predictive value for the ELISA. However, the South African panel (n = 150) had a seroprevalance rate of only 17% though the positive predictive value remained at 100% for the ELISA.
The performance of new diagnostic tools is determined by comparison to the gold standard assays available at that point in time. For the serodiagnosis of HSV, WB has been the gold standard against which gG-based HSV serology tests have been measured for U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval (2, 4). Other tests, such as the monoclonal inhibition assay, have also been shown to be useful in detecting and discriminating HSV-1 and HSV-2 antibodies (14). However, even these two gold standard assays have different performance characteristics. For example, Slomka et al. demonstrated a high degree of concordance between WB and the monoclonal inhibition assay for HSV-1; however, the monoclonal inhibition assay detected 20% fewer positive samples than did WB in the first episodes of primary HSV-2 genital herpes (14). The inhibition assay described in the present study shows a very high concordance with WB and provides a sound approach for evaluating unclear HSV results. The HerpeSelect ELISA has a very high degree of concordance with both the inhibition assay and WB. Discordant samples are geographically limited and may be due to strain differences, assay sensitivity, or restricted antibody cross-reactivity.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the following sources for providing the serum panels
used in this study: for the Zimbabwe and Uganda B panels, we
thank the collaborators of the Hormonal Contraception and the
Risk of HIV Acquisition Study at the University of Zimbabwe,
University of California at San Francisco, Makere University,
Case Western Reserve University, Family Health International,
and the Statistical Center for HIV/AIDS Research and Prevention;
for the Kenya A and B panels, we thank Jared Baeton, University
of Washington, Seattle; for the South Africa panel, we thank
Pierre Schoeman; and for the Uganda A panel, we thank JoAnn
Yee, University of California, Davis. We thank Anne Cent for
assistance with WB testing, Harry Prince for critical review
of the manuscript, and Manya Cerna for assistance in preparing
the manuscript.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Focus Technologies, 5785 Corporate Ave., Cypress, CA 90630. Phone: (714) 220-1900. Fax: (714) 821-3364. E-mail:
Whogrefe{at}focusanswers.com.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 2002, p. 3635-3640, Vol. 40, No. 10
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.10.3635-3640.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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