Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Development and evaluation of a reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification assay for H3N8 equine influenza virus.
- Journal:
- Journal of virological methods
- Year:
- 2011
- Authors:
- Nemoto, Manabu et al.
- Affiliation:
- Equine Research Institute · Japan
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
Researchers developed a new test called RT-LAMP to detect the H3N8 strain of equine influenza virus (EIV) in horses. This test is much more sensitive than previous methods, being able to detect the virus at much lower levels, and it showed no false positives when tested against other horse illnesses. During an outbreak in 2007, the RT-LAMP test found the virus in 52 out of 100 nasal swabs from sick horses, while older tests only detected it in 17 and 41 samples. Because of its high sensitivity and ease of use, this new test could be a valuable tool for diagnosing equine influenza in the lab.
Abstract
Reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) was applied to the detection of equine influenza virus (EIV). Because equine influenza is caused currently by EIV of the H3H8 subtype, the RT-LAMP primer set was designed to target the hemagglutinin gene of this subtype. The detection limit of the RT-LAMP assay was a virus dilution of 10(-5); which was 10(3) times more sensitive than the Espline Influenza A&B-N test and 10 times more sensitive than a reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay. The specificity of the RT-LAMP assay was examined by using several equine pathogens and nasal swabs collected from horses with fever in 2010 after EIV was eradicated in Japan. No cross-reactions were observed. Using 100 nasal swabs collected from horses with fever during an EIV outbreak in 2007, the RT-LAMP assay detected EIV in 52 samples, whereas the Espline test and the RT-PCR assay detected EIV in only 17 and 41 samples, respectively. These results indicate that the RT-LAMP assay is specific for EIV and more sensitive than the Espline test and the RT-PCR assay. Because it provides high sensitivity and ease of manipulation without the need for a thermal cycler or gel electrophoresis, the RT-LAMP assay should be applicable for laboratory diagnosis of EIV.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21907240/