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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2006, p. 2698-2704, Vol. 44, No. 8
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.00542-06
Polio and Picornavirus Laboratory Branch, Division of Viral Diseases, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Received 13 March 2006/ Returned for modification 24 April 2006/ Accepted 24 May 2006
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Molecular diagnostic tests for the detection of EVs in clinical specimens usually target highly conserved sites in the 5' nontranslated region (5'-NTR), allowing detection of all members of the genus (27). Many enteroviruses do not grow readily in cell culture; hence, these diagnostic tests based on PCR are frequently more sensitive than traditional methods. Because it is more sensitive and much faster than culture, providing reliable results in a clinically relevant time frame, PCR is rapidly becoming the new "gold standard" for enterovirus detection (5, 25, 26, 32). Despite their generally better detection sensitivities, however, these tests are genus specific and provide an EV-positive or EV-negative result, but they cannot be used to identify the serotype.
The sequence of the EV VP1 capsid gene correlates with the serotype determined by antigenic methods (14) and is an ideal target for EV detection tests that can both detect and identify EVs. To take advantage of the excellent correlation between the VP1 sequence and the enterovirus serotype, we developed primers with broad target specificities to facilitate sequencing of a portion of VP1 as a molecular typing system (12, 13, 19). Since then, other investigators have developed analogous methods targeting different portions of VP1 (3, 4, 11, 31). In this system, nucleotide sequences which are at least 75% identical (85% amino acid identity) are considered to represent strains of the same serotype (12-14, 19, 20). As a result, this approach has been widely accepted as a surrogate for antigenic typing for the identification of EV isolates (1, 2, 6-9, 15-18, 21, 22, 24).
Even though the detection of virus from original clinical specimens by targeting the 5'-NTR has achieved very high sensitivities and sequencing of the VP1 region provides a practical means of establishing the identity of an enterovirus, identification of the serotype directly from clinical specimens has been considerably more problematic. This is primarily because the virus titer is typically very low in original specimens; as a result, nonspecific amplification may outcompete virus-specific amplification. Several reverse transcription (RT)-nested or RT-seminested PCR (RT-snPCR) methods have been developed to address these issues (4, 10, 31). However, these methods either target only a subset of EV serotypes (31) or rely on highly degenerate, inosine-containing primers in both PCR steps to broaden the target specificity to include all serotypes (4, 10), which can adversely affect sensitivity. The use of degenerate, inosine-containing primers often results in nonspecific amplification of host cell nucleic acids and may obscure the virus-specific product (30). We have adapted a primer design strategy that reduces nonspecific amplification and that was originally applied to the amplification and identification of new homologs of cellular genes and to the discovery of novel herpesviruses (28, 30). Our RT-snPCR method achieves high sensitivity, amplifies all known human EV serotypes, and permits the detection of EVs in clinical specimens as well as the identification of the serotype by amplicon sequencing.
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TABLE 2. Enterovirus reference strains amplified by VP1 RT-snPCRa
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TABLE 3. Clinical isolates amplified by VP1 RT-snPCR
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RT-PCR and sequencing.
Synthesis of cDNA was carried out in a 10-µl reaction mixture containing 5 µl of RNA, 100 µM each deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP; Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ), 2 µl of 5x reaction buffer (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), 0.01 M dithiothreitol, 1 pmol each cDNA primer (primers AN32, AN33, AN34, and AN35; Table 1), 20 U of RNasin (Promega Corp., Madison, WI), and 100 U of SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). Following incubation at 22°C for 10 min, 45°C for 45 min, and 95°C for 5 min, the entire 10 µl RT reaction mixture was then used in the first PCR (final volume, 50 µl) (PCR1), consisting of 5 µl of 10x PCR buffer (Roche Applied Science), 200 µM each dNTP, 50 pmol each of primers 224 and 222 (Table 1), and 2.5 U of Taq DNA polymerase (Roche Applied Science), with 40 cycles of amplification (95°C for 30 s, 42°C for 30 s, 60°C for 45 s). One microliter of the first PCR was added to a second PCR (PCR2) for seminested amplification. PCR2 contained 40 pmol each of primers AN89 and AN88 (Table 1), 200 µM each dNTP, 5 µl of 10x FastStart Taq buffer (Roche Applied Science), and 2.5 U of FastStart Taq DNA polymerase (Roche Applied Science) in a final volume of 50 µl. The FastStart Taq polymerase was activated by incubation at 95°C for 6 min prior to 40 amplification cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 60°C for 20 s, and 72°C for 15 s. The reaction products were separated and visualized on 1.2% agarose gels containing 0.5 µg ethidium bromide per ml and were purified from the gel by using a QIAquick gel extraction kit (QIAGEN). Slight variations in the sizes of the PCR products (
350 to 400 bp) were observed due to VP1 gene length differences in the different serotypes, as described previously (12-14, 19). The resulting DNA templates were sequenced with a BigDye Terminator v1.1 ready reaction cycle sequencing kit on an ABI Prism 3100 automated sequencer (both from Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) by using primers AN89 and AN88 or primers AN232 and AN233 (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Primers used for cDNA synthesis, PCR amplification, and sequencing
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Assay sensitivity. Sensitivity was tested by two methods. The sensitivity relative to the results of cell culture infectivity was measured by using a stock of the EV serotype 68 (EV68) prototype strain Fermon whose titer had been determined. Serial 10-fold dilutions of the EV68-Fermon stock were made in Hank's balanced salt solution, and RNA from 100 µl of each dilution was extracted with the QIAamp Viral RNA mini kit. RNAs representing from 104 cell culture infectious dose 50% end-point units (CCID50) to 103 CCID50 per 5 µl were tested with the VP1 RT-snPCR assay.
Absolute sensitivity was measured by using an in vitro-transcribed synthetic RNA standard derived from EV68-Fermon. To make the synthetic RNA standard, RT-PCR primers were designed to flank the VP3-VP1 RT-snPCR assay cDNA product. The sense primer AN230 contains the 23-base T3 RNA polymerase promoter at the 5' end, and it was used with the antisense primer AN231 (Table 1) in a two-step RT-PCR. cDNA was made with SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen), according to the instructions provided with the kit, by using 10 pmol AN231 to prime the cDNA. PCR was performed with FastStart Taq (Roche Applied Science) by using the manufacturer's 10x buffer with MgCl2, 2 µl of cDNA, 200 µM each dNTP, and 20 pmol each of primers AN230 and AN231 in a final reaction volume of 50 µl. The thermocycler program consisted of 40 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 55°C for 40 s, and 72°C for 40 s. The PCR product was purified by using a High Pure PCR product purification kit (Roche Applied Science), according to the manufacturer's instructions. The purified PCR product was quantitated spectrophotometrically, and 1 µg of PCR product was used as the template for in vitro RNA transcription with a MEGAscript high yield transcription kit (Ambion, Inc., Austin, TX), according to the manufacturer's protocol. The VP3-VP1 single-stranded, positive-sense standard RNA product (VP3-VP1 sRNA; 1,082 nucleotides) was digested with DNase I to remove the template DNA and was then purified with the QIAamp Viral RNA mini kit (QIAGEN). The manufacturer's instructions were followed, except that no carrier tRNA was added to the kit's lysis buffer. The purified VP3-VP1 sRNA was quantitated spectrophotometrically, and the concentration was calculated in units of RNA molecules per microliter. Two separate lots of the VP3-VP1 sRNA were synthesized and diluted to contain from 104 copies to 1 copy per 5 µl and then tested in two separate experiments with the VP1 RT-snPCR assay.
The sensitivity of the VP1 RT-snPCR assay was also directly compared to that of our published 5'-NTR RT-snPCR assay (10) by serially diluting RNA extracted from a recent EV68 clinical isolate and running both the VP1 and the 5'-NTR RT-snPCR assays in parallel by using the same diluted RNA preparations.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The sequences for the original clinical specimens described here have been deposited in the GenBank sequence database (accession numbers AY903638 to AY903644).
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the locations of the primers used in the CODEHOP VP1 RT-snPCR. (A) Similarity plot of the aligned capsid amino acid sequences of 64 enterovirus prototype strains. Sequence identity scores were calculated within each 6-residue window, and the window was progressively moved across the alignment in 1-residue increments, with the identity score plotted versus the position at the center of the window. The positions of the four mature EV capsid proteins, VP4, VP2, VP3, and VP1, are shown at the top. The orientations and approximate positions of the cDNA primers (open arrowheads) and PCR primers (filled arrowheads) are shown directly above the plot. (B) Amino acid motifs used in primer design and schematic representation of the steps in the CODEHOP VP1 RT-snPCR assay. Consensus amino acid motifs are shown. Asterisks indicate that the residue directly above the asterisk is present at that position in at least 90% of EV prototype strains; when only a single residue is shown, it is present in all prototype strains. Primer sequences are shown directly below the amino acid motif sequences. Ambiguity codes are as follows: R, A or G; Y, C or T; W, A or T; N, A, C, G, or T; I, inosine.
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The internal primers used in PCR2 were designed without the use of inosine residues by using the CODEHOP strategy and with target sites encoding conserved motifs in VP1. Our original protocol used forward internal primer 292, which targets the conserved motif (Q/T)A(A/V)ETG, paired with reverse primer 222 (Table 1; Fig. 1). The new forward PCR2 primer, primer AN89, is 3' coterminal with primer 292, but it targets a longer motif [PALTA(A/V)E(I/T)G] and incorporates an additional degeneracy at position 6 to allow annealing to codons that encode either isoleucine or threonine in the penultimate codon of the motif. Primer AN88 is 3' coterminal with primer 222 and targets the motif M(F/Y)(I/V)PPGGPV (Table 1; Fig. 1). The consensus clamp and increased length both probably contribute to the increased thermostabilities of primers AN88 and AN89 compared with those of primers 292 and 222.
Assay evaluation. To ensure that the new primers are broadly reactive and have the same ability to amplify VP1 sequences of all EV serotypes as our previous primers, we tested a panel of reference strains representing all serotypes (101 strains total), as well as a panel of 87 recent clinical isolates of 29 different types. All 64 EV serotype reference strains, the 22 proposed new serotypes, and 15 additional reference strains for some serotypes were successfully amplified and sequenced by the CODEHOP VP1 RT-snPCR procedure (Table 2). All 87 clinical isolates tested were also successfully amplified, sequenced, and identified by comparing the nucleic acid sequence to the sequences in our EV reference strain VP1 sequence database (Table 3). In all cases, the serotype based on the VP1 RT-snPCR amplicon was identical to the serotype previously determined by neutralization or by VP1 sequencing with different primers and conventional PCR (12, 13, 19).
Assay sensitivity. Due to the absence of a gold standard for an analytical sensitivity measure that is applicable across all serotypes of enteroviruses, sensitivity was measured in two different ways so that the sensitivity could be compared to those obtained by previously described assays. The VP1 RT-snPCR assay detected RNA extracted from as little as 0.01 CCID50 per 5 µl of EV68-Fermon (Fig. 2A), indicating that the assay is at least 100-fold more sensitive than cell culture for this strain of virus (since 1 CCID50 defines the cell culture end point). As few as 10 copies of the in vitro-transcribed VP3-VP1 sRNA produced a detectable gel band in two independent experiments, indicating a low limit of absolute sensitivity (Fig. 2B). The diluted EV68 clinical isolate RNA was amplified from the 101 to 107 dilutions with the 5'-NTR RT-snPCR assay and from the 101 to 108 dilutions with the VP1 RT-snPCR assay (Fig. 2C), indicating that the VP1 assay has sensitivity at least equal to or possibly 10-fold better than that of the 5'-NTR assay.
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FIG. 2. Sensitivity of VP1 RT-snPCR and comparison of the sensitivity with that of the 5' nontranslated region RT-snPCR. (A) Amplification of RNA extracted from 10-fold serial dilutions of an EV68 virus stock; (B) amplification of 10-fold serial dilutions of VP3-VP1 sRNA; (C) comparison of VP1 RT-snPCR (top) with 5'-NTR RT-snPCR (bottom) using 10-fold serial dilutions.
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FIG. 3. VP1 RT-snPCR amplification of RNA extracted directly from original clinical specimens. For each reaction, 50 µl of each seminested PCR2 product was analyzed and gel purified by electrophoresis on a 1.5% agarose gel containing 0.5 µg ethidium bromide per milliliter. The specimens tested were cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), stool, rectal swab (RS), nasopharyngeal swab (NPS), eye (conjunctival) swab (ES), serum, and postmortem liver tissue.
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Several PCR assays have been developed to allow EV serotype identification directly from original clinical specimens by nested amplification and sequencing of VP1 (4, 10, 31). The nested amplification format increases the sensitivity substantially, rivaling that of nested 5'-NTR assays (4, 10), so that nested VP1 assays can be used for both detection and identification. However, nonspecific amplification can sometimes occur when degenerate primers are used in a nested PCR assay, particularly when nucleic acids isolated from tissues or other high-complexity specimens are amplified. The CODEHOP primer design strategy has the advantage that most or all primers are able to initiate DNA synthesis in early PCR rounds by virtue of annealing of the degenerate core sequence to the template, which is further stabilized by base pairing by at least some of the residues in the nondegenerate clamp sequence. The clamp sequence is present in all newly synthesized molecules during subsequent rounds of amplification, enabling virtually all primer molecules to participate in amplification. The inclusion of the nonconserved consensus clamp sequences in primers AN88 and AN89 did not affect the amplification efficiency for viruses that contained mismatches in this region (data not shown), even when stringent annealing conditions were used. This is probably because the degenerate core sequence is a good match for virtually all EVs and because at least a few of the bases in the clamp are able to form base pairs and contribute to the stability of the primer-template helix in the initial rounds of PCR. Once the primers have been incorporated into the PCR products, the primers and templates match perfectly, allowing highly efficient amplification. Since its initial description (30), the CODEHOP approach has been used to amplify previously unknown gene homologs in a wide variety of plants, animals, and bacteria, as well as herpesviruses and retroviruses (29). To our knowledge, this work represents the first application of the CODEHOP strategy to the amplification of an RNA virus and the first application of the method to primary virus diagnostics. By eliminating inosine from the primers used in the second, nested PCR, our VP1 CODEHOP PCR has increased specificity versus nonviral templates and an increased sensitivity for viral targets, while it maintains the broad viral target specificity of the methods that use inosine-containing primers (4, 10).
As an example of the potential clinical/public health application of our method, we used the VP1 RT-snPCR assay to identify EVs in a diverse array of clinical specimens (Fig. 3). EVs were successfully amplified and amplicons were sequenced from cerebrospinal fluid; stool; serum; liver tissue; and rectal, nasopharyngeal, and eye swab specimens. Amplicons from all of these specimen sources yielded high-quality sequences that provided clear serotype identification of the infecting viruses. We have subsequently applied this approach to the testing of routine diagnostic specimens in parallel with more conventional real-time 5'-NTR detection assays. The approach achieved sensitivity comparable to those of conventional real-time 5'-NTR detection assays and provided virus identification without the use of cell culture (unpublished data).
Our CODEHOP VP1 RT-snPCR is a sensitive assay of broad target specificity that can successfully amplify template RNA from all known EV serotypes. Its sensitivity is superior to that of 5'-NTR RT-snPCR assays, with product detection performed with stained gels (Fig. 2), probably because of the high degree of RNA secondary structure in the 5'-NTR, which prevents complete template melting and efficient annealing of the primers. In addition to EV identification, molecular epidemiologic analysis of the sequences derived from the VP1 RT-snPCR products can also furnish clues to virus transmission pathways during epidemiologic field investigations. Bypassing cell culture in the early phases of an outbreak investigation can help to focus limited resources and allow rapid identification of epidemiologically linked cases. When more detailed virus characterization is desired, an informed choice can be made as to which specimens should be inoculated into cell culture and, in many cases, which cell lines should be used to maximize the efficiencies of these more labor-intensive methods.
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