PCR and peptide based PCMV detection in pig - development and application of a combined testing procedure differentiating newly from latent infected pigs.
Nicole FischerBarbara GulichBarbara KeßlerMatthias LänginJay A FishmanEckhard WolfKlaus BollerRalf R TönjesAntonia W GodehardtPublished in: Xenotransplantation (2023)
Porcine cytomegalovirus (PCMV) is widely distributed in pigs and difficult to detect due to latency. PCMV infection of source pigs was associated with early graft failure after cardiac and renal xenotransplantation into nonhuman primates. Importantly, PCMV infection of the first genetically modified pig heart into a human may have contributed to the reduced survival of the patient. Sensitive and reliable assays for detection of latent PCMV infection are thus indispensable. Here, we report the development of five peptide-induced rabbit antisera specific for PCMV glycoprotein B (gB) and their validation for detection of PCMV in infected pig fallopian tube (PFT) cells by immunofluorescence and electron microscopy (EM). The anti-gB antibodies were also used for detection by Western blot analysis of PCMV purified from the supernatant of infected PFT cells. Sera of infected versus non-infected pigs have been compared. In parallel, PCMV viral load in blood samples of the animals was quantified by a novel highly sensitive nested-PCR and qPCR assay. A combination of four partly overlapping peptides from the gB C-terminus was used to establish a diagnostic ELISA for PCMV gB specific pig antibodies which is able to differentiate infected from non-infected animals and to quantify maternal antibodies in neonates. The combination of a highly sensitive nested PCR for direct virus detection with a sensitive peptide-based ELISA detecting anti-PCMV gB-antibodies, supplemented by Western blot analysis and/or immunohistochemistry for virus detection will reliably differentiate pigs with active infection, latently infected pigs, and non-infected pigs. It may significantly improve the virologic safety of xenotransplantation.
Keyphrases
- real time pcr
- label free
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- induced apoptosis
- south africa
- pregnant women
- body mass index
- endothelial cells
- magnetic resonance
- preterm infants
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- minimally invasive
- epstein barr virus
- simultaneous determination
- low birth weight
- stress induced
- preterm birth
- computed tomography