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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2002, p. 2323-2330, Vol. 40, No. 7
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.7.2323-2330.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Rapid Detection and Quantification of RNA of Ebola and Marburg Viruses, Lassa Virus, Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever Virus, Rift Valley Fever Virus, Dengue Virus, and Yellow Fever Virus by Real-Time Reverse Transcription-PCR
Christian Drosten,* Stephan Göttig, Stefan Schilling, Marcel Asper, Marcus Panning, Herbert Schmitz, and Stephan Günther
Bernhard-Nocht-Institute of Tropical Medicine, Hamburg, Germany
Received 15 October 2001/
Returned for modification 7 January 2002/
Accepted 23 March 2002

ABSTRACT
Viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHFs) are acute infections with high
case fatality rates. Important VHF agents are Ebola and Marburg
viruses (MBGV/EBOV), Lassa virus (LASV), Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic
fever virus (CCHFV), Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV), dengue
virus (DENV), and yellow fever virus (YFV). VHFs are clinically
difficult to diagnose and to distinguish; a rapid and reliable
laboratory diagnosis is required in suspected cases. We have
established six one-step, real-time reverse transcription-PCR
assays for these pathogens based on the Superscript reverse
transcriptase-Platinum
Taq polymerase enzyme mixture. Novel
primers and/or 5'-nuclease detection probes were designed for
RVFV, DENV, YFV, and CCHFV by using the latest DNA database
entries. PCR products were detected in real time on a LightCycler
instrument by using 5'-nuclease technology (RVFV, DENV, and
YFV) or SybrGreen dye intercalation (MBGV/EBOV, LASV, and CCHFV).
The inhibitory effect of SybrGreen on reverse transcription
was overcome by initial immobilization of the dye in the reaction
capillaries. Universal cycling conditions for SybrGreen and
5'-nuclease probe detection were established. Thus, up to three
assays could be performed in parallel, facilitating rapid testing
for several pathogens. All assays were thoroughly optimized
and validated in terms of analytical sensitivity by using in
vitro-transcribed RNA. The

95% detection limits as determined
by probit regression analysis ranged from 1,545 to 2,835 viral
genome equivalents/ml of serum (8.6 to 16 RNA copies per assay).
The suitability of the assays was exemplified by detection and
quantification of viral RNA in serum samples of VHF patients.

INTRODUCTION
Viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF) is a clinical syndrome caused
by different viruses. VHF agents belong to the
Filoviridae (Marburg
virus [MBGV] and Ebola virus [EBOV]),
Arenaviridae (Lassa virus
[LASV] and Junin, Machupo, Sabia, and Guanarito viruses),
Bunyaviridae (Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus [CCHFV], Rift Valley
fever virus [RVFV], and Hanta viruses), and
Flaviviridae (yellow
fever virus [YFV] and dengue virus [DENV]) (
27). The natural
reservoirs of these viruses are arthropods, ticks, and rodents;
the reservoir of filoviruses is not known. Infections by VHF
viruses are associated with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations
such as diarrhea, myalgia, cough, headache, pneumonia, encephalopathy,
and hepatitis (
4,
18,
19,
25,
33,
37,
40,
41). Hemorrhage is
the characteristic manifestation, although nonhemorrhagic infections
are also common. VHF is often fatal in spite of modern intensive
care. Filoviruses, arenaviruses, and CCHFV are of particular
relevance because they can be transmitted from human to human,
thus causing epidemics with high mortality rates (
3,
13,
24).
Nearly all VHF agents are endemic in tropical or subtropical
regions. However, infections can also occur outside these regions,
for example, in returning travelers (
38). Very recently, LASV
infections have been imported to Germany (
17,
18), The Netherlands
(
2), and the United Kingdom (
1). In 1999 a patient died from
imported yellow fever in Germany (
41), and there are several
earlier reports on the import of VHF infections into Europe,
Japan, or North America (
19,
42).
In the absence of bleeding or organ manifestation, a VHF is clinically difficult to diagnose, and the various etiologic agents can hardly be distinguished by clinical tests. The range of possible agents can be narrowed down by the travel history. The definitive diagnosis of a VHF relies mainly on laboratory testing. A clinical VHF suspect must be rapidly excluded or the causative virus must be identified to initiate specific treatment, if possible, as well as appropriate case management such as isolation measures or tracking of contact persons.
PCR has been successfully applied in the diagnosis of VHF (7, 8, 22, 28, 30, 31, 36). However, most of the published assays are time-consuming, as they include a separate cDNA synthesis step prior to PCR, agarose gel analysis of PCR products, and in some instances a second round of nested amplification or Southern hybridization. PCRs for different pathogens have to be run assay by assay due to differences in cycling conditions, which complicates broad-range testing in a short period of time. Moreover, post-PCR processing or nested PCR steps included in currently used assays increase the risk of false-positive results due to carryover contamination (26). Very recently, real-time PCR assays for detection of RVFV and DENV and discrimination of EBOV subtypes have been published (5, 14, 15).
To facilitate reliable testing for a wide range of VHF agents in a short period of time, we have established a PCR system comprising six one-step, real-time reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) assays for MBGV and EBOV (MBGV/EBOV), LASV, CCHFV, RVFV, DENV, and YFV. For rapid qualitative testing, all PCRs can be performed in two runs on a LightCycler instrument with two universal cycling conditions. Each assay can be used separately for quantification of viral RNA. The establishment and validation of these PCRs are described, as well as their application for detection and quantification of viral RNA in patient samples.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Virus propagation.
MBGV/EBOV, LASV, CCHFV, RVFV, DENV, and YFV were grown on Vero
cells in the biosafety level 3 and 4 facilities of the Bernhard-Nocht-Institute.
Supernatants were taken 3 to 5 days after virus inoculation.
Serum samples.
Serum samples were from one acute and one convalescent case of Ebola hemorrhagic fever (Gulu, Uganda, October 2000 [3]), two cases of imported Lassa fever (Würzburg, Germany, January 2000 [17], and Leiden, The Netherlands, March 2000 [2]), an acute case of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (Prizren, Kosovo, May 2000), an imported case of yellow fever (Berlin, Germany, August 1999 [41]), and an imported case of acute secondary dengue fever with hemorrhagic diathesis (Hamburg, Germany, August 2001).
RNA preparation.
Human sera and cell culture supernatants were cleared by centrifugation in a table-top centrifuge at 10,000 x g for 10 min. Viral RNA was prepared from 140 µl of the cell-free fluid by using the Qiamp viral RNA kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) without modification. RNA was eluted in 50 µl.
Oligonucleotide design.
All sequences available from the EMBL, GenBank, and DDBJ databases (accessed autumn 2000) were included in the search for possible primer binding regions. Sequence alignments to identify conserved regions were done using the BLAST algorithm at the National Center for Biotechnology Information website. Primers and corresponding 5'-nuclease detection probes were designed with Primer Express software (Applied Biosystems, Weiterstadt, Germany). Several possible primers and probes were synthesized (Tib Molbiol, Berlin, Germany). All 5'-nuclease probes were labeled with 6-carboxyfluorescein at the 5' end and with 6-carboxy-N,N,N',N'-tetramethylrhodamine at the 3' end. The 3' end of each probe was phosphorylated to prevent elongation during PCR. The final oligonucleotide sequences are given in Table 1.
RT-PCR conditions.
The one-step RT-PCR system combining Superscript reverse transcriptase
with Platinum
Taq-polymerase (Life Technologies, Karlsruhe,
Germany) was used in 5'-nuclease and SybrGreen assays. The 20-µl
assay contained 10 µl of reaction mix provided with the
kit (including the basic level of MgSO
4), 40 ng of bovine serum
albumin (Sigma, Munich, Germany) per µl, and 2 µl
of RNA. The reaction capillaries for MBGV/EBOV, LASV, and CCHFV
RT-PCR were prepared as follows: 1 µl of SybrGreen stock
solution (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Mannheim, Germany) diluted
1:5,000 in dimethyl sulfoxide was centrifuged to the bottom
of the LightCycler capillary and lyophilized for 40 min without
prior freezing. The concentrations of additional MgSO
4, sense
and antisense primers, and 5'-nuclease probe (only for RVFV,
DENV, and YFV) are listed for each virus in Table
2.
Universal cycling profiles for qualitative RT-PCR.
RT-PCR of MBGV/EBOV, LASV, and CCHFV with SybrGreen detection
involved the following steps: reverse transcription at 50°C
for 20 min; initial denaturation at 95°C for 5 min; 10 precycles
with 95°C for 5 s, 60°C for 5 s with a temperature decrease
of 1°C per cycle, and 72°C for 25 s; and 40 cycles with
95°C for 5 s, 56°C for 10 s, and 72°C for 30 s.
Since SybrGreen intercalates nonspecifically into PCR products
(
32), a melting curve analysis was performed following PCR to
identify the correct product by its specific melting temperature.
Melting curve analysis included 95°C for 5 s, 65°C for
15 s, and heating to 95°C at a rate of 0.1°C/s with
continuous reading of fluorescence. RT-PCR of RVFV, DENV, and
YFV with 5'-nuclease probe detection (
20,
29) involved reverse
transcription at 45°C for 30 min, initial denaturation at
95°C for 5 min, and 45 cycles with 95°C for 5 s and
57°C for 35 s. Fluorescence was read at the combined annealing-extension
step at 57°C.
Cycling profiles for quantification of viral RNA.
For quantification of MBGV/EBOV, LASV, and CCHFV RNAs, PCR was done essentially as described for qualitative detection, except that precycling was followed by 40 cycles with 95°C for 5 s, 56°C for 10 s, 72°C for 25 s, and a fluorescence read step at 79°C (MBGV/EBOV and CCHFV) or at 83°C (LASV) for 15 s. Quantification by 5'-nuclease probe detection (DENV, YFV, and RVFV) was done as described for qualitative detection.
In vitro transcription.
The diagnostic target regions were amplified by RT-PCR using viral RNA prepared from cell culture supernatant and cloned into T7 polymerase expression vector pT-Adv (Clontech, Heidelberg, Germany). The complete inserts including the T7 promoter were amplified with vector-specific primers. The PCR product was purified and then in vitro transcribed and DNase digested using the MegaScript T7 in vitro transcription kit (Ambion, Austin, Tex.). The RNA was purified with RNeasy columns (Qiagen) and quantified spectrophotometrically.
Statistical analysis.
The
95% detection limits of the RT-PCRs were determined by probit analysis (12) using the Statgraphics plus 5.0 software package (Statistical Graphics Inc.). The experimental input data for this nonlinear regression model were the different test concentrations of RNA (0 to 8,000 RNA copies/ml) and the corresponding proportions of positive results after replicate (n = 6) PCRs.

RESULTS
Design of primers and 5'-nuclease detection probes.
Real-time detection of PCR products by 5'-nuclease technology
is highly specific. A fluorescent dye-labeled detection probe
hybridizes with the specific PCR product and is cleaved during
PCR by the 5'-exonuclease activity of
Taq polymerase, which
activates the dye (
20,
29). Primer-probe combinations for this
technology were designed for YFV, DENV, and RVFV (Table
1).
Conserved sequences were used as target sites for computer-aided
design of several possible sense and antisense primers as well
as hybridization probes for 5'-nuclease detection. Novel primers
were also designed for CCHFV, while no conserved binding site
for a 5'-nuclease probe could be found. The genomic target regions
and the optimal primer-probe combinations as determined experimentally
(see below) are shown in Fig.
1. None of the primer sequences
showed homologies above the statistical threshold to other database
sequences by BLAST searching. Novel primers were not designed
for MBGV/EBOV and LASV, because these viruses were found to
be too variable for design of 5'-nuclease probes and published
primers (
7,
36) largely matched the above-described criteria.
Establishment of one-step RT-PCR with real-time SybrGreen detection.
Since probes could not be designed for MBGV/EBOV, LASV, and
CCHFV, the suitability of the DNA-intercalating dye SybrGreen
I for real-time detection of PCR products was tested. A SybrGreen
concentration of 0.001% (vol/vol) of the stock solution (the
manufacturer does not indicate the concentration of the stock
solution), as required for detection of PCR products in the
LightCycler, did not interfere with the activity of
Taq DNA
polymerase. However, this concentration inhibited all one-step
RT-PCR assays tested (Brilliant RT-PCR system [Stratagene],
Thermoscript and Superscript RT-PCR systems [Life Technologies],
and a combination of Superscript reverse transcriptase [Life
Technologies] with AmpliTaqGold DNA polymerase [Applied Biosystems]).
Further experiments revealed that only the reverse transcription
step was inhibited. To overcome this inhibitory effect, we wondered
whether it might be possible to initially separate the dye from
the reaction but to enable its release during PCR. To this end,
1 µl of SybrGreen stock solution diluted 1:5,000 in dimethyl
sulfoxide was centrifuged to the bottom of the LightCycler reaction
capillaries and lyophilized. One-step RT-PCRs running with this
simple modification were as sensitive as those running without
dye (Fig.
2), whereas real-time detection of the PCR product
was possible. Prepared capillaries were stored for up to 1 week
at room temperature without affecting RT-PCR performance.
SybrGreen intercalates independent of the sequence into double-stranded
DNA (
32). To prevent detection of nonspecific primer-dimer artifacts,
a separate fluorescence read step was added at the end of each
cycle. The temperature at this reading step exceeded the melting
point of short primer-dimers (i.e., they are single stranded
and thus are not a target for SybrGreen) but not that of the
specific PCR product. By using this reading procedure, the nonspecific
signal that was initially observed in the negative controls
(data not shown) could be completely eliminated (see negative
controls in Fig.
4, left panels). The optimum reading temperatures
as determined for each assay are stated in Materials and Methods.
Optimization of reaction and cycling conditions.
In pilot experiments, the Superscript II RT/Platinum
Taq polymerase
one-step RT-PCR kit (Life Technologies) was found to be more
sensitive and robust than other enzyme combinations tested.
It was used as a basis for all six PCR assays. Designed primers
and probes were tested in all possible combinations, and the
most sensitive pair of primers was chosen for further optimization.
PCR products generated with these primers were cloned and in
vitro transcribed. About 10
3 transcript copies were used as
a template in subsequent titration experiments. In order to
most accurately determine the optimal reaction conditions, various
concentrations (

4 concentrations) of one component were simultaneously
tested versus various concentrations (

4 concentrations) of another
component (4
x 4 = 16 reactions) (
16). The following titrations
were performed for each PCR: sense versus antisense primer concentration,
5'-nuclease probe versus total primer concentration, and Mg
2+ versus total primer concentration. Criteria for optimal conditions
were both the intensity of fluorescence at the end of the reaction
(as high as possible) and the number of cycles needed before
a signal became detectable (as low as possible). The optimum
concentrations of these four parameters are summarized in Table
2.
The one-step RT-PCR SybrGreen I kit (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), a preassembled reaction mix containing Tth polymerase and SybrGreen, underwent a similar optimization process with LASV RNA as a template. However, even after extensive optimization the sensitivity was lower than that with the Superscript II/Platinum kit and immobilized dye.
In order to shorten the total running time if several assays have to be performed in parallel, two universal RT-PCR profiles were established (see Materials and Methods). One profile was optimized for simultaneous processing of YFV, RVFV, and DENV PCRs with 5'-nuclease probe detection, and the other profile was optimized for MBGV/EBOV, LASV, and CCHFV PCRs with qualitative SybrGreen detection.
Analytical sensitivity and specificity.
For statistically precise determination of the detection limit, four different concentrations of RNA transcript were spiked into human plasma prior to RNA preparation and tested in six replicates (24 test reactions per PCR assay). The numbers of positive and negative reactions obtained with each of the four RNA concentrations were subjected to probit regression analysis (12) to calculate the probability of achieving a positive result at any RNA concentration within the range of 0 to 10,000 copies per ml of plasma (Fig. 3). Virus genome equivalents (geq) per milliliter of plasma which could be detected with
95% probability were as follows: LASV, 2,445 geq/ml (95% confidence interval, 1,848 to 3,903); MBGV/EBOV, 2,647 geq/ml (1,887 to 4,964); CCHFV, 2,779 geq/ml (2,021 to 6,017); YFV, 1,545 geq/ml (1,003 to 2,207); RVFV, 2,835 geq/ml (2,143 to 4,525); and DENV, 2,550 geq/ml (1,871 to 4,212). These detection limits corresponded to 8.6 to 16 geq per reaction, taking into account that RNA was prepared from 140 µl of plasma and 1/25 of the RNA preparation was used as the template and assuming 100% efficiency in RNA preparation.
Specificity of the VHF assays was evaluated by testing samples
containing heterologous nucleic acid. None of the assays amplified
human immunodeficiency virus type 1, hepatitis C virus, hepatitis
B virus, herpes simplex virus type 1, cytomegalovirus, Modoc
virus,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis,
Mycobacterium leprae,
Borrelia spp.,
Leptospira spp.,
Neisseria spp.,
Plasmodium spp., or
Leishmania spp.
Suitability in diagnostics and quantification of virus in VHF patient samples.
The PCR set was used for about 30 suspected cases of VHF. As an inhibition control, in vitro-transcribed EBOV RNA was spiked into an aliquot of each RNA preparation and amplified in parallel with the test samples. Purification of RNA and performance of all six assays in two LightCycler runs was usually accomplished in less than 6 h. We have not encountered any false-positive RT-PCR results due to contamination.
To exemplify the suitability of the assays and to obtain first data on virus RNA levels in VHF patients, viral RNA concentrations in serum samples from patients with Ebola hemorrhagic fever, Lassa fever, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever, yellow fever, and dengue fever were measured (Fig. 4). The samples were amplified in parallel with in vitro-transcribed RNA of the corresponding virus as a quantification standard. All assays showed an excellent correlation (r
0.9) between cycle number and RNA concentration over a broad dynamic range (Fig. 4, standard curves). The patients were found to have high virus RNA concentrations in serum: one patient with Lassa fever had 7 x106 and 4 x109 geq/ml at days 4 and 13 of illness, respectively, and the other had 9 x 106 geq/ml on day 13 of illness; the patient with acute Ebola fever had 6.9 x 108 geq/ml, and the convalescent Ebola fever patient had 7 x 106 geq/ml; the patient with Crimean-Congo fever had 7.7 x 105 geq/ml; the patient with yellow fever had 4 x 105 geq/ml; and the patient with dengue fever had 8 x 105 geq/ml (Fig. 4). Thus, virus concentrations in patients in the acute phase of VHF were orders of magnitudes above the 95% detection limits of the assays.

DISCUSSION
This report describes the establishment of a PCR system, comprising
six real-time, one-step RT-PCR assays, for rapid diagnosis of
important VHF agents. Both specific 5'-nuclease probes and a
newly developed SybrGreen method were used for real-time detection.
The assays were thoroughly validated with respect to their analytical
sensitivity by using in vitro-transcribed RNA. Their suitability
was exemplified by detection and quantification of VHF agents
in human serum samples.
A major problem in designing oligonucleotides for diagnostic PCRs of RNA viruses is the considerable genetic variability of these viruses. In order to reduce the risk of PCR failure due to mismatches in primer binding sites, as many sequences as possible, covering known genotypes or phylogenetic lineages, must be included in primer design. This strategy was followed in designing novel oligonucleotides for the assays described in this study. The primers are based on 30 to 90 sequences of a conserved region in each virus. Therefore, it is assumed that these novel primers and probes will bind with high likelihood to unknown virus isolates. They may be further optimized when novel sequences become available in the future.
When PCR is to be used in a diagnostic setting, a thorough validation of the analytical performance, especially sensitivity, is mandatory. Standardized virus stocks with defined numbers or units of genomes per milliliter are the test material of choice. They are available for widely used PCR assays detecting prevalent viruses, such as hepatitis C virus, hepatitis B virus, or human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (9, 21, 35), but not for VHF pathogens. For less common viruses, PCR sensitivity has been determined by comparison with classical virological quantification methods (22). However, the ratio between infectious units and viral RNA copies depends on the fraction of noninfectious RNA-containing virus such as defective interfering particles and will predictably differ between various viruses or stocks of the same virus. Therefore, PFU do not provide precise information on the concentration of RNA-containing particles in a virus stock. We have circumvented this problem by using quantified, in vitro-transcribed RNA spiked into plasma to determine the analytical sensitivity. Although replicate testing of defined RNA concentrations followed by statistical probit regression analysis is laborious, it is one of the most accurate methods to determine the analytical sensitivity of PCR (9, 12, 39). The calculation that 9 to 16 RNA copies per reaction can be detected with a probability of 95% indicates that all RT-PCRs are well optimized. These copy numbers are close to the detection limits of commercial PCR assays for hepatitis C virus or human immunodeficiency virus (43).
There are presently no data available on viral RNA concentrations in patients with VHF. Using the established assays, we have analyzed a few sera of patients with VHF. The RNA concentrations in all patients were orders of magnitudes above the detection limits, suggesting that the assays are sufficiently sensitive to diagnose VHF during the acute febrile phase. To define the clinical sensitivity of the assays more precisely would require testing of well-characterized serum panels from patients with different courses of VHF and in different stages of the disease. However, such panels are not available. The possibility of quantifying viral RNA may prove to be useful in therapy monitoring and to estimate the prognosis.
The specificity of the assays was evaluated by testing specimens containing nucleic acids of a variety of common pathogens. However, the negative results with these samples do not completely exclude the possibility of nonspecific amplification in other samples. While in the 5'-nuclease only the specific PCR product is detected due to the sequence-specific hybridization of the probe, the melting point in the SybrGreen assays is much less specific. Therefore, even if the melting point of a PCR product corresponds to that of the positive control, the presence of the specific product needs to be verified by agarose gel analysis and sequencing. In this regard, it should be mentioned that the assays were validated only for serum, which contains a low background level of heterologous nucleic acid.
Especially when the detection of several possible pathogens is needed in short periods of time, as is usually the case in VHF diagnostics, it is necessary to perform tests in parallel rather than sequentially. The simultaneous detection of various pathogens has often been addressed by multiplex PCR. Up to six different sequences were detected (23). However, the more sequences are targeted in one PCR, the more difficult it becomes to achieve optimal reaction conditions for each individual pair of primers. Nonspecific interference of oligonucleotides is generally thought to be an additional limitation of multiplex PCR (11). Low sensitivity has been observed in several multiplex PCRs and was overcome by nested PCR (6, 10, 34). This, however, increases the risk of contamination and prolongs the processing time. For these reasons we have chosen to detect the pathogens in assays which are optimized separately with regard to reaction components but which share common thermal cycling conditions. This strategy facilitates running of different assays in parallel but only marginally increases the hands-on time compared with that in multiplex PCR. Furthermore, the range of agents tested for can easily be adapted according to the travel history of the patient. MBGV/EBOV, LASV, and CCHFV, which can cause epidemics by human-to-human transmission, are tested together in the first LightCycler run. Thus, the first results on these most important viruses are available within 3 h after arrival of the samples in the laboratory. However, definitive diagnosis or exclusion of a VHF should not be based on a single PCR result. The described set of PCRs must be embedded in a diagnostic procedure involving additional tests, such as virus isolation in cell culture, antigen enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, confirmatory PCRs, or detection of virus-specific immunoglobulin M and immunoglobulin G by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or immunofluorescence.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Nadine Peters for excellent technical assistance and
Matthias Grade, Clinical Department of the Bernhard-Nocht-Institute,
for supplying serum samples from Ugandan patients with Ebola
hemorrhagic fever.
This work was supported by grants E/B31E/M0171/M5916 and E/B41G/1G309/1A403 from the Bundesamt für Wehrtechnik und Beschaffung. The Bernhard-Nocht-Institute is supported by the Bundesministerium für Gesundheit and the Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Bernhard-Nocht-Institute of Tropical Medicine, Bernhard-Nocht Strasse 74, 20359 Hamburg, Germany. Phone: 49-40-42818-414. Fax: 49-40-42818-378. E-mail:
drosten{at}bni.uni-hamburg.de.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2002, p. 2323-2330, Vol. 40, No. 7
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.7.2323-2330.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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