O'Brien Caitlin A, Hobson-Peters Jody, Yam Alice Wei Yee, Colmant Agathe M G, McLean Breeanna J, Prow Natalie A, Watterson Daniel, Hall-Mendelin Sonja, Warrilow David, Ng Mah-Lee, Khromykh Alexander A, Hall Roy A
Australian Infectious Disease Research Centre, School of Chemical and Molecular Biosciences, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia.
Public Health Virology Laboratory, Forensic and Scientific Services, Department of Health, Archerfield, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015 Mar 23;9(3):e0003629. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003629. eCollection 2015 Mar.
Mosquito-borne viruses encompass a range of virus families, comprising a number of significant human pathogens (e.g., dengue viruses, West Nile virus, Chikungunya virus). Virulent strains of these viruses are continually evolving and expanding their geographic range, thus rapid and sensitive screening assays are required to detect emerging viruses and monitor their prevalence and spread in mosquito populations. Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) is produced during the replication of many of these viruses as either an intermediate in RNA replication (e.g., flaviviruses, togaviruses) or the double-stranded RNA genome (e.g., reoviruses). Detection and discovery of novel viruses from field and clinical samples usually relies on recognition of antigens or nucleotide sequences conserved within a virus genus or family. However, due to the wide antigenic and genetic variation within and between viral families, many novel or divergent species can be overlooked by these approaches. We have developed two monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) which show co-localised staining with proteins involved in viral RNA replication in immunofluorescence assay (IFA), suggesting specific reactivity to viral dsRNA. By assessing binding against a panel of synthetic dsRNA molecules, we have shown that these mAbs recognise dsRNA greater than 30 base pairs in length in a sequence-independent manner. IFA and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were employed to demonstrate detection of a panel of RNA viruses from several families, in a range of cell types. These mAbs, termed monoclonal antibodies to viral RNA intermediates in cells (MAVRIC), have now been incorporated into a high-throughput, economical ELISA-based screening system for the detection and discovery of viruses from mosquito populations. Our results have demonstrated that this simple system enables the efficient detection and isolation of a range of known and novel viruses in cells inoculated with field-caught mosquito samples, and represents a rapid, sequence-independent, and cost-effective approach to virus discovery.
蚊媒病毒包括一系列病毒科,其中包含许多重要的人类病原体(如登革病毒、西尼罗河病毒、基孔肯雅病毒)。这些病毒的毒株不断进化并扩大其地理范围,因此需要快速灵敏的筛查检测方法来检测新出现的病毒,并监测它们在蚊虫种群中的流行情况和传播范围。许多此类病毒在复制过程中会产生双链RNA(dsRNA),它要么是RNA复制的中间体(如黄病毒科、披膜病毒科),要么是双链RNA基因组(如呼肠孤病毒科)。从野外和临床样本中检测和发现新型病毒通常依赖于识别病毒属或科内保守的抗原或核苷酸序列。然而,由于病毒科内部和之间存在广泛的抗原和遗传变异,许多新的或不同的病毒种类可能会被这些方法忽略。我们开发了两种单克隆抗体(mAb),在免疫荧光分析(IFA)中,它们与参与病毒RNA复制的蛋白质呈现共定位染色,这表明它们对病毒dsRNA具有特异性反应。通过评估与一组合成dsRNA分子的结合情况,我们发现这些单克隆抗体能够以序列无关的方式识别长度大于30个碱基对的dsRNA。我们采用IFA和酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)来证明在一系列细胞类型中检测来自几个科的一组RNA病毒。这些单克隆抗体被称为细胞中病毒RNA中间体单克隆抗体(MAVRIC),现已被纳入基于ELISA的高通量、经济的筛查系统,用于检测和发现蚊虫种群中的病毒。我们的结果表明,这个简单的系统能够有效地检测和分离接种了野外捕获蚊虫样本的细胞中的一系列已知和新型病毒,代表了一种快速、序列无关且经济高效的病毒发现方法。