Department of Molecular and Medical Virology, Ruhr-University Bochum, D-44780 Bochum, Germany.
Retrovirology. 2009 Sep 22;6:86. doi: 10.1186/1742-4690-6-86.
Contamination of vertebrate cell lines with animal retroviruses has been documented repeatedly before. Although such viral contaminants can be easily identified with high sensitivity by PCR, it is impossible to screen for all potential contaminants. Therefore, we explored two novel methods to identify viral contaminations in cell lines without prior knowledge of the kind of contaminant.
The first hint for the presence of contaminating retroviruses in one of our cell lines was obtained by electron microscopy of exosome-like vesicles released from the supernatants of transfected 293T cells. Random amplification of particle associated RNAs (PAN-PCR) from supernatant of contaminated 293T cells and sequencing of the amplicons revealed several nucleotide sequences showing highest similarity to either murine leukemia virus (MuLV) or squirrel monkey retrovirus (SMRV). Subsequent mass spectrometry analysis confirmed our findings, since we could identify several peptide sequences originating from monkey and murine retroviral proteins. Quantitative PCRs were established for both viruses to test currently cultured cell lines as well as liquid nitrogen frozen cell stocks. Gene fragments for both viruses could be detected in a broad range of permissive cell lines from multiple species. Furthermore, experimental infections of cells negative for these viruses showed that both viruses replicate rapidly to high loads. We decided to further analyze the genomic sequence of the MuLV-like contaminant virus. Surprisingly it was neither identical to MuLV nor to the novel xenotropic MuLV related retrovirus (XMRV) but showed 99% identity to a synthetic retrovirus which was engineered in the 1980s.
The high degree of nucleotide identity suggests unintended spread of a biosafety level 2 recombinant virus, which could also affect the risk assessment of gene-modified organisms released from contaminated cell cultures. The study further indicates that both mass spectrometry and PAN-PCR are powerful methods to identify viral contaminations in cell lines without prior knowledge of the kind of contaminant. Both methods might be useful tools for testing cell lines before using them for critical purposes.
脊椎动物细胞系被动物逆转录病毒污染的情况已被多次记录。虽然这些病毒污染物可以通过 PCR 以高灵敏度轻松识别,但无法筛选所有潜在的污染物。因此,我们探索了两种新方法,以便在不知道污染物种类的情况下识别细胞系中的病毒污染。
我们的一个细胞系中存在污染逆转录病毒的第一个线索是通过转染 293T 细胞上清液中释放的类外泌体小泡的电子显微镜获得的。受污染 293T 细胞上清液的颗粒相关 RNA 的随机扩增(PAN-PCR)和扩增子的测序揭示了几个核苷酸序列,这些序列与鼠白血病病毒(MuLV)或松鼠猴逆转录病毒(SMRV)显示出最高的相似性。随后的质谱分析证实了我们的发现,因为我们可以鉴定出源自猴和鼠逆转录病毒蛋白的几个肽序列。为这两种病毒建立了定量 PCR,以测试当前培养的细胞系以及液氮冷冻的细胞储存库。这两种病毒的基因片段可在多种物种的多种允许细胞系中检测到。此外,对这些病毒呈阴性的细胞进行的实验感染表明,这两种病毒均迅速复制并达到高载量。我们决定进一步分析 MuLV 样污染物病毒的基因组序列。令人惊讶的是,它既与 MuLV 不同,也与新型嗜性 MuLV 相关逆转录病毒(XMRV)不同,而是与 20 世纪 80 年代设计的一种合成逆转录病毒具有 99%的同一性。
核苷酸高度同一性表明,生物安全 2 级重组病毒的传播是无意的,这也可能影响从受污染细胞培养物释放的基因修饰生物体的风险评估。该研究进一步表明,质谱和 PAN-PCR 都是在不知道污染物种类的情况下识别细胞系中病毒污染的有力方法。这两种方法都可能是在将细胞系用于关键用途之前进行测试的有用工具。