Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
A quantitative real-time reverse transcription PCR (qRT-PCR) assay to detect genome segment 9 of all 26 bluetongue virus serotypes.
- Journal:
- Journal of virological methods
- Year:
- 2015
- Authors:
- Maan, Narender S et al.
- Affiliation:
- The Pirbright Institute · United Kingdom
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
Bluetongue is a viral disease that can be very serious for certain animals like sheep and white-tailed deer, but it often causes mild or no symptoms in other types of animals. Researchers have developed a new test that can quickly and accurately detect a specific part of the bluetongue virus, which is important for monitoring and controlling outbreaks. This test was able to identify the virus from various strains found in different countries, showing it works well even with very small amounts of the virus. It did not give false positives when tested on samples from healthy animals or other similar viruses. Overall, this new test is effective for detecting bluetongue virus in various situations.
Abstract
Bluetongue (BT) is an arboviral disease, which can often be fatal in naïve sheep and white tailed deer, but is usually less severe, or unapparent in other ruminants. Twenty-six bluetongue virus (BTV) serotypes have been recognised so far, two of which (BTV-25 and BTV-26) were recently identified by phylogenetic comparisons of genome-segment/outer-capsid protein VP2 (subsequently confirmed by serological 'virus-neutralisation' assays). Rapid, sensitive, reliable and quantitative diagnostic-assays for detection and identification of BTV represent important components of effective surveillance and control strategies. The BTV genome comprises 10 linear segments of dsRNA. We describe a 'TaqMan' fluorescence-probe based quantitative real-time RT-PCR assay, targeting the highly conserved genome-segment-9 (encoding the viral-helicase 'VP6' and NS4). The assay detected Seg-9 from isolates of all 26 BTV types, as well as from clinical samples derived from BTV-6w and BTV-8w outbreaks (in Europe), BTV-25 from Switzerland, BTV-26 from Kuwait, BTV-1w, BTV-4w and BTV-8w from Spain, BTV-4w, BTV-8, BTV-10 and BTV-16 from Brazil. Assay efficiency was evaluated with RNA derived from the reference strain of BTV-1w [RSArrrr/01] and was 99.6%, detecting down to 4 copies per reaction. Samples from uninfected insect or mammalian cell-cultures, hosts-species (uninfected sheep blood) or vector-insects, all gave negative results. The assay failed to detect RNA from heterologous but related Orbivirus species (including the nine African horse sickness virus [AHSV] and seven epizootic haemorrhagic disease virus [EHDV] serotypes).
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25486080/