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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2004, p. 1003-1011, Vol. 42, No. 3
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.3.1003-1011.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Nuffield Department of Clinical Sciences, Oxford University,1 Department of Microbiology, Oxford Radcliffe NHS Trust, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU, United Kingdom2
Received 22 September 2003/ Returned for modification 13 November 2003/ Accepted 9 December 2003
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An internal control for diagnostic RT-PCR assays should ideally have the following characteristics. It should be straightforward and economical to produce and standardize and should have sufficient stability for routine storage and use. Its sequence should be absent from clinical samples, and the control preparation should be noninfectious. It should be suitable for many different assays, the results of which should be simple to interpret. Few (if any) internal controls described to date have all of these features.
Several groups have designed competitive DNA and RNA internal controls, with the same primer pair used to detect both the control and the target microbe. The two amplicons were then differentiated by size or by the use of heterologous probes (1, 4, 18, 23, 26). A method for the production of competitive RNA controls that proved useful for the identification of RT-PCR inhibitors has been described (13). However, if the same primers are used to detect both the control and the target amplicons, the overall detection limit of the assay may be compromised, especially if the target microbe is present at low levels. Competitive controls are incompatible with multiplex PCR in which several primer pairs are required. Multiplex PCR is attractive for molecular diagnostics since multiple pathogens producing similar symptoms can be screened for simultaneously in a single reaction.
Noncompetitive internal controls have also been described, with separate primer pairs used to detect the control and the microbe(s) of interest. Such controls often comprise endogenous RNA or DNA in the sample, for example, ß-actin or 18S rRNA (24). Unfortunately, the concentrations of these RNAs vary widely among clinical samples. Alternatively, a clinical sample may be spiked with a known amount of an animal virus such nonhuman seal herpes virus type 1 (DNA) or phocine distemper virus (RNA) (20, 27). Although attractive, the use of live viruses as internal controls may raise issues of safety and consistency between preparations. Positive controls for various RT-PCR assays have been developed commercially (Armored RNA; Ambion [Europe Ltd.], Huntingdon, United Kingdom). These consist of an RNA fragment assembled into phage-like particles (7, 21). This technology has also been adapted to provide an internal control for a real-time PCR assay (6). Their cost and a lack of versatility have so far prevented the widespread adoption of Armored RNA controls.
A significant number of the many RT-PCR assays described to date are for respiratory viruses. These pathogens cause a considerable burden of illness, particularly during the winter. Since different viruses often cause similar symptoms, appropriate patient management can be assisted by rapid laboratory tests with a low limit of detection. Respiratory viruses have traditionally been detected by cell culture and more recently by commercially available direct immunofluorescence tests. RT-PCR is faster and more sensitive than cell culture and offers greater sensitivity than immunofluorescence (9, 25, 28). The aims of the present study were twofold: (i) to identify an RNA molecule suitable for routine use as a universal reaction-specific internal control and (ii) to include the control in a routine assay for nine clinically important respiratory viruses.
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FIG. 1. Modified HDV genome used as an internal control. (A) Representation of the predicted rod-like secondary structure of the HDV genome; (B) linear representations of the sequence used for in vitro transcription of the control RNA (1.2 copies of the genome) and the PCR amplicons used as internal controls. The sequences of vector pTW107, including the sequences of the T7 promoter and the HindIII site used to linearize the vector, are shown as heavier lines. ORF, open reading frame.
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Application of internal control to three multiplex nested RT-PCR assays for nine respiratory viruses. (i) Coextraction of internal control and RNA from clinical samples. Clinical samples including nasopharyngeal aspirates, throat and nasal swabs, bronchoalveolar lavage samples, samples from endotracheal tips, and lung biopsy specimens were diluted by the addition of 1 to 5 ml of virus transport medium (depending on the specimen volume). Further disruption of the biopsy tissue was not performed, as the tissue had been stored in the virus transport medium for several days and sufficient virus for detection was present in the medium. Cellular debris was removed from all specimens by centrifugation at 1,000 rpm in an Eppendorf 5415D benchtop centrifuge for 5 min. Total RNA was extracted from the supernatant by use of a silica column-based kit (Viral RNA mini kit; Qiagen Ltd., Crawley, United Kingdom) according to the instructions of the manufacturer, with the following modifications. Prior to RNA extraction, 1 µl of 100 fg of modified HDV RNA (internal control) per µl was added to 280 µl of AVL extraction buffer (Qiagen Ltd.). This was followed by the addition of 69 µl of respiratory sample supernatant. The RNA was eluted from the column in 40 µl of AVE buffer (Qiagen Ltd.).
(ii) cDNA synthesis. RT was performed in a 20-µl reaction volume containing 10.5 µl of RNA and 0.5 µl (250 ng) of random hexamers (Promega UK). This was denatured at 70°C for 10 min, followed by immediate transfer to ice, on which the remainder of the reaction mixture was assembled: 4 µl of the first-strand buffer (Invitrogen Ltd., Paisley, United Kingdom), 2 µl of 0.1 M dithiothreitol (Invitrogen Ltd.), 1 µl of deoxynucleoside triphosphates (10 mM; Invitrogen Ltd.), 1 µl of RNAsin (Promega UK), and 1 µl of Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen Ltd.). Incubation was at 37°C for 1 h, followed by inactivation at 70°C for 10 min.
(iii) PCR amplification. The oligonucleotide primers used are shown in Table 1. For each first round of amplification, the 50-µl PCR mixture contained 5 µl of cDNA, 5 µl of 10x Hotstar Taq DNA polymerase reaction buffer (Qiagen Ltd.) containing 15 mM MgCl2, 1 µl of the oligonucleotide primer mixture (containing each target virus primer at 10 µM and the internal control primers at 5 µM), 1 µl of 10 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, and 0.25 µl (1.25 U) of Hotstar Taq DNA polymerase (Qiagen Ltd.). For the second-round nested amplification reaction, the mixture (50 µl) included 1 µl of the product of the first PCR as template and an additional 3 µl of 25 mM MgCl2 (final concentration, 4 mM). The following amplification conditions were used: denaturation and enzyme activation at 95°C for 15 min, followed by 40 cycles of denaturation at 94°C for 20 s, annealing at 55°C for 20 s, and extension at 72°C for 45 s in the first PCR or 30 s in the nested PCR, followed by a final extension at 72°C for 5 min. The reaction products were analyzed by electrophoresis on 2% agarose gels.
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TABLE 1. PCR primers used in the three internally controlled, nested multiplex PCRs to detect nine respiratory virusesa
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In vitro transcription of HDV internal control RNA. Plasmid pTW107, which contained 1.2 copies of a modified HDV genome, was constructed with a 2-nucleotide deletion in the open reading frame encoding the delta antigen (Fig. 1). This safety consideration rendered the RNA transcribed from the plasmid incapable of replication (5, 16). After transcription, the integrity of the RNA was confirmed by gel electrophoresis and it was standardized by use of a spectrophotometer. The number of molecules present was calculated by use of Avogadro's number. RNA hydrolysis was minimized by storage at -80°C in sodium citrate solution (RNA storage solution; Ambion [Europe Ltd.]).
To confirm that the control RNA was free of contaminating plasmid DNA, a 10-fold dilution series of the RNA (0.1 µg/µl to 0.1 fg/µl) was made. Each aliquot was extracted as a clinical sample, and the RNA was divided into two. Half was used for cDNA synthesis and the other was stored on ice prior to amplification. All aliquots were then amplified by nested PCR with primers delta-1 and delta-2 in the first round (Fig. 2A) and primers delta-3 and delta-4 in the second round (Fig. 2B). These primers were designed from one side of the predicted rod-like structure of the HDV genome (Fig. 1B; Table 1). The detection limit after the first PCR amplification corresponded to the 10-pg RNA dilution, and that after the nested PCR corresponded to 10 fg. The latter corresponds to approximately 10,800 RNA molecules. No residual plasmid DNA was detected under these conditions in the RNA lacking RT.
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FIG. 2. Detection of in vitro-transcribed HDV control RNA by RT-PCR and confirmation that the DNA plasmid template was efficiently removed. (A) Lanes 1 to 10, RT-PCR amplification products from a 10-fold serial dilution of in vitro-transcribed HDV RNA. The dilution series extended from 0.1 µg of RNA per RT-PCR mixture in lane 1 to 0.1 fg in lane 10. The amplification primers were delta-1 and delta-2, which gave a product of 761 bp. Lanes 11 to 20, as for lanes 1 to 10, but without RT of the template RNA to detect any contaminating plasmid template DNA; lane 21, negative control; lane L, 1-kb ladder (Bio-Rad). Sizes (in base pairs) are indicated on the left. A total of 10 µl of each 50-µl PCR mixture was analyzed. (B) As for panel A, but showing the amplification products of a nested PCR performed with the templates described in the legend to panel A and primers delta-3 and delta-4 to obtain a product of 506 bp. The detection limit is shown in lane 8 and is 10 fg of RNA, which corresponds to approximately 10,800 molecules of RNA added to the extract.
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Internally controlled assay for nine respiratory viruses. The nine viruses used in this study were chosen on the basis of clinical need and potential benefits for patient management. They were influenza A and influenza B viruses, respiratory syncytial virus type A (RSV A), RSV B, human metapneumovirus (HuMV), and parainfluenza virus types 1 to 4 (PIV-1 to PIV-4, respectively). Although RT-PCR assays for these viruses have been described previously, the assays were incompatible with the HDV internal control due to the amplicon sizes and/or the oligonucleotide primer design. Furthermore, our aim was to detect all nine viruses in three nested multiplex RT-PCRs (Fig. 3) by using one cDNA synthesis reaction followed by identical thermocycling conditions. This would simplify the routine use of the assay. New multiplex assays were therefore designed incorporating the internal control.
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FIG. 3. Overview of the internally controlled nested multiplex RT-PCR assay for the detection of nine respiratory viruses.
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TABLE 2. Virus genes targeted in nested multiplex RT-PCRs to detect the nine respiratory viruses
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Second, the sequences chosen for primer design were confirmed to be conserved among isolates and to be genetically stable over time. A total of 191 isolates obtained up to 20 years ago were tested (Table 3). These isolates were contained either in known positive clinical samples (previously identified by direct immunofluorescence, cell culture, or an alternative PCR assay) or in archived cell culture supernatants. A single contradictory result was obtained: a nasopharyngeal aspirate which was previously positive for influenza A virus by cell culture was negative for the virus by PCR. One avian influenza A virus (H7N7) isolated from a human conjunctival swab specimen (17) was detected in an archived, frozen cell culture supernatant by the influenza A virus-specific RT-PCR.
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TABLE 3. PCR primer verificationa
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FIG. 4. The HDV internal control did not compromise the limit of detection of the assay. Nine plasmids containing each of the first-round PCR amplification products were constructed. A dilution series containing 102 to 10-1 molecules of each plasmid per µl was made, and 1 µl of each dilution was amplified in each nested multiplex PCR. (A) RSV A, RSV B, and HuMV; (B) influenza A and B viruses; (C) PIV-1 to PIV-4. To determine whether the HDV internal control compromised the limit of detection, the PCR mixture also contained the HDV internal control cDNA (reverse-transcribed RNA, not plasmid HDV DNA) at the same concentration used in the diagnostic assay. The virus amplicons are indicated by arrowheads, and the HDV control is indicated by asterisks. As the concentration of the plasmid containing the target virus sequences was increased, the yield of the control amplicon decreased or disappeared completely. For comparison, a PCR mixture containing HDV cDNA alone was performed (lanes ). neg, negative controls lacking target DNA.
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TABLE 4. Clinical specimens used for routine clinical testing by the assay
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FIG. 5. Results of screening of 20 respiratory specimens for nine target viruses by internally controlled nested multiplex RT-PCRs. Lanes 1 to 20 each include a single specimen in all three gels. (A) Assay for PIV-1 to PIV-4 (detection of each virus is indicated by P1, P2, P3, and P4, respectively); (B) assay for influenza A and B viruses (the detection of each virus is indicated by FA and FB, respectively); (C) assay for RSV A, RSV B, and HuMV (the detection of each virus is indicated by RA, RB, and M, respectively). A specimen with a dual infection is shown in lane 5. Asterisks, detection of the internal control when target viruses were not detected; lanes L, 1-kb DNA ladder (Bio-Rad); +ve, coamplified positive control plasmid DNA for each of the target viruses, -ve, negative control for contamination; NEG, the specimen is negative for virus.
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TABLE 5. Application of the assay to routine clinical testinga
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The control RNA was simple to produce and standardize by spectrophotometry. High yields of the control RNA were easily transcribed in vitro, and contaminating plasmid template DNA was not detectable at the concentrations tested in the nested RT-PCRs (Fig. 2). The RNA was stored at -80°C in 100x-concentrated stock solutions (10 pg/µl) and single-use aliquots (100 fg/µl). It proved sufficiently stable during storage for routine use (RNA stored for at least 8 months at -80°C and a 100x-concentrated stock that had undergone two freeze-thaw cycles were tested). The RNA was coextracted with each clinical sample, which provided a control for the extraction, RT, PCR, and detection steps of the assay. The modified HDV sequence may provide a suitable control for other assays based on nucleic acid amplification. Our data suggest that HDV cDNA (a plasmid or linear HDV sequence) may also be used as a suitable control in assays for the detection of pathogens with DNA genomes and that it could also be adapted for use in a real-time PCR.
The HDV genome sequence was absent from the respiratory specimens tested by the assay. However, the control sequence may be present very rarely in certain samples, such as blood from patients with hepatitis B virus infection who are coinfected with HDV. The structural characteristics which make HDV an attractive control are shared by its relatives, the plant viroids (8), which may provide an alternative to HDV. The viroids have much smaller genomes than HDV (246 to 401 nucleotides, compared to 1,700 nucleotides) and could be particularly useful controls for assays based on real-time PCR. It may also prove useful as an internal standard for samples from cell cultures and veterinary samples.
The control RNA was modified by the deletion of two nucleotides within the open reading frame encoding the delta antigen. This renders the HDV RNA incapable of replication (5, 16), which also requires the presence of hepatitis B virus. The control was therefore suitable for routine use, since it is noninfectious. Infectivity may be a possible disadvantage of the routine use of animal viruses as internal controls, (20, 27), and many laboratories lack the facilities for their production. However, animal viruses have the advantage of an intact capsid, providing an authentic control for the protein-disruption phase of the extraction step. A protein coat could be added to modified HDV RNA, possibly by using phage proteins, such as those in Armored RNA (Ambion [Europe Ltd.]) (21). This would combine the structural advantages of the HDV RNA with the advantages of the intact capsids of animal viruses.
The assay was designed so that the presence of the internal control did not detectably compromise the detection limits of the RT-PCRs (Fig. 4). When the target viruses were detected in clinical samples, the control amplicon disappeared or was reduced in intensity (Fig. 4 and 5). This may be due to the rod-like secondary structure of HDV (14, 29), which makes it a poor template for RT and which makes the resultant cDNA a suboptimal template for the first round of PCR. Subsequent rounds of PCR would be unaffected by the secondary structure, since the primers were designed from one side of the HDV rod-like genome. However, the high G+C content of HDV (60%) would adversely affect all rounds of the PCR. The difficulty of amplification of the control sequence because of its nature was illustrated experimentally by using Q solution (Qiagen Ltd.) to reduce the secondary structure of the template and the influence of its high G+C content. In the presence of Q solution, the limit of detection of the control sequence was enhanced 100-fold. Preferential amplification of the target viruses over amplification of the control was also enhanced by providing target virus primers at 0.2 µM and HDV primers at 0.1 µM and by designing target amplicons smaller than the internal control amplicon (Table 2) so that they could be more readily amplified (Fig. 5).
To date, the only conditions in which the internal control was identified to compromise the detection limit of a PCR was when it was multiplexed with highly degenerate primers specific for the target virus (data not shown). Under these conditions, in the presence of low concentrations of target virus, the control amplicon was amplified in preference to the virus amplicon. Therefore, degeneracy in the assay primers was avoided or minimized, being restricted to a single wobbling base per primer (Table 1) when it was unavoidable.
The specificities of the PCR primers were validated by using a large number of known positive clinical samples and cell culture supernatants (Table 3). The detection limit of the PCR was confirmed by using a 10-fold plasmid dilution series (Fig. 4). The difference in detection limit of the influenza A and B virus-specific RT-PCRs (in which 1 molecule was detected) compared to the RSV-, HuMV-, and PIV-specific RT-PCRs (in which 10 molecules were detected) may be due to the higher numbers of primers included in the PCRs for the last group of viruses. The lower limit of detection at the viral RNA level was not determined, as virus of known concentration is required. If a preparation of virus is assayed by cell culture, a titer can be determined, but the preparation will contain an unknown number of dead viruses; i.e., viral nucleic acid is present, but it is not possible to measure the amount.
The numbers of viruses identified in clinical samples between 29 October 2002 and 14 April 2003 (Table 5) correlated with the national trends for RSV and influenza viruses during the winter of 2002-2003 in the United Kingdom (Health Protection Agency Data[http://www.phls.co.uk/topics_az/seasonal/menu.htm]). Three coinfections were identified. This represented 0.92% of the total and is fewer than the numbers reported in many studies that have used RT-PCR (9, 12). However, the coamplification of all target amplicons from plasmids containing cloned amplicons (Fig. 5, lane +ve [positive]) indicates that coinfections can be detected. The low detection limit (as little as a single molecule of target virus) of nested RT-PCR raises the possibility that viral RNA which is not relevant to a patient's current condition may be detected. An objective measurement of the data collected in the present study, together with patient symptoms, is under way to address this issue and quantify the performances of these assays for the diagnosis of viral diseases.
The present study provides proof of concept that highly structured G+C-rich RNA or DNA molecules may be used as reaction-specific internal controls in molecular diagnostic tests. Their application to further assays based on both gel and real-time detection systems may provide a simple solution to the well-known problem of obtaining internal controls suitable for routine use.
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virus RNA. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:5631-5634.
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