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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 05 1997, 1080-1089, Vol 35, No. 5
RJ Awad, GE Corrigan, DH Ekstrand, R Thorstensson, CF Kallander and JS Gronowitz
Standardization and calibration of a new colorimetric assay for detection
of reverse transcriptase (RT) was carried out for optimal detection of RT
activity-blocking antibody (RTb-Ab) in serum. A total of 99 of 100 Swedish
and 54 of 54 African human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
antibody-positive individuals had RTb-Ab. The one RTb-Ab- negative HIV-1
serum sample from a Swedish individual was obtained early during
seroconversion. Five of 615 HIV-1-negative sera from tumor patients,
pregnant women, patients undergoing routine viral diagnostics, and blood
donors gave false-positive results. In addition, 3 of 126 HIV-1-negative
African serum samples and 2 of 91 serum samples selected because of false
reactivity in other commercially available HIV antibody assays were
positive for RTb-Ab. RT activity and RTb-Ab were measured in sera from
newly HIV-1-infected individuals during seroconversion. Peak RT activity
was usually detected between days 8 and 13 after the onset of symptoms of
primary infection. In addition, HIV-1 RTb-Ab was detected in the same
recently infected individuals in most cases within 1 month and in some
cases as early as 10 to 12 days after the onset of symptoms. A
cross-reactivity study involving HIV-1 and HIV-2 RTb-Abs and their
homologous RT showed HIV-1 RTb-Ab to be highly type specific. None of 10
serum samples from HIV-1-infected individuals showed cross-reacting RTb-Ab
toward HIV-2 RT, whereas 4 of 10 serum samples from HIV-2-infected patients
showed cross-reactivity toward HIV-1 RT; however, the cross-reactivity
toward HIV-1 RT was 3,000 times lower than that toward its homologous RT.
Future uses for the assay with reference to the recent World Health
Organization proposal for other methods instead of Western blotting
(immunoblotting) for confirming HIV-1 infection and for methods for the
diagnosis of infection as follow-up in vaccine trials are also discussed.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Measurement of levels of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase (RT) and RT activity-blocking antibody in human serum by a new standardized colorimetric assay
Department of Medical Genetics, Uppsala University, Sweden.
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