The effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.

Classical swine fever (CSF), also known as hog cholera, is a highly contagious viral infection of swine caused by a member of the genus pestivirus of the family, Flaviviridae. The need for accurate laboratory diagnosis of CSF is particularly important as it is more reliable than clinical diagnosis....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Blacksell, S, Khounsy, S, Westbury, H
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2004
_version_ 1797103090383454208
author Blacksell, S
Khounsy, S
Westbury, H
author_facet Blacksell, S
Khounsy, S
Westbury, H
author_sort Blacksell, S
collection OXFORD
description Classical swine fever (CSF), also known as hog cholera, is a highly contagious viral infection of swine caused by a member of the genus pestivirus of the family, Flaviviridae. The need for accurate laboratory diagnosis of CSF is particularly important as it is more reliable than clinical diagnosis. CSF is endemic in many tropical countries where the climate is characterized by high ambient temperature and humidity. This study details the effect of sample quality on CSF antigen-capture ELISA (AC-ELISA) and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) methods. RT-PCR assessment of AC-ELISA-positive spleen samples stored in a conventional glycerol/saline buffer demonstrated that the RT-PCR was detrimentally affected by poor sample quality. To provide a more accurate representation of this effect, a 14 days study was performed to determine the effect of tropical ambient conditions on CSF virus-positive spleen samples stored in two transport media; glycerol/saline and a proprietary RNA preservation solution (RNAlater). A protective effect was demonstrated in both assays with RNAlater as samples were positive in both assays until day 14 post-exposure. Samples stored in glycerol/saline were negative at RT-PCR at day 3 post-exposure although AC-ELISA was still positive at day 14 post-exposure.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:15:08Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:f0d2b1a4-8317-4043-ae40-31da57d6bcde
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:15:08Z
publishDate 2004
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:f0d2b1a4-8317-4043-ae40-31da57d6bcde2022-03-27T11:51:13ZThe effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:f0d2b1a4-8317-4043-ae40-31da57d6bcdeEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2004Blacksell, SKhounsy, SWestbury, HClassical swine fever (CSF), also known as hog cholera, is a highly contagious viral infection of swine caused by a member of the genus pestivirus of the family, Flaviviridae. The need for accurate laboratory diagnosis of CSF is particularly important as it is more reliable than clinical diagnosis. CSF is endemic in many tropical countries where the climate is characterized by high ambient temperature and humidity. This study details the effect of sample quality on CSF antigen-capture ELISA (AC-ELISA) and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) methods. RT-PCR assessment of AC-ELISA-positive spleen samples stored in a conventional glycerol/saline buffer demonstrated that the RT-PCR was detrimentally affected by poor sample quality. To provide a more accurate representation of this effect, a 14 days study was performed to determine the effect of tropical ambient conditions on CSF virus-positive spleen samples stored in two transport media; glycerol/saline and a proprietary RNA preservation solution (RNAlater). A protective effect was demonstrated in both assays with RNAlater as samples were positive in both assays until day 14 post-exposure. Samples stored in glycerol/saline were negative at RT-PCR at day 3 post-exposure although AC-ELISA was still positive at day 14 post-exposure.
spellingShingle Blacksell, S
Khounsy, S
Westbury, H
The effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.
title The effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.
title_full The effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.
title_fullStr The effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.
title_full_unstemmed The effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.
title_short The effect of sample degradation and RNA stabilization on classical swine fever virus RT-PCR and ELISA methods.
title_sort effect of sample degradation and rna stabilization on classical swine fever virus rt pcr and elisa methods
work_keys_str_mv AT blacksells theeffectofsampledegradationandrnastabilizationonclassicalswinefevervirusrtpcrandelisamethods
AT khounsys theeffectofsampledegradationandrnastabilizationonclassicalswinefevervirusrtpcrandelisamethods
AT westburyh theeffectofsampledegradationandrnastabilizationonclassicalswinefevervirusrtpcrandelisamethods
AT blacksells effectofsampledegradationandrnastabilizationonclassicalswinefevervirusrtpcrandelisamethods
AT khounsys effectofsampledegradationandrnastabilizationonclassicalswinefevervirusrtpcrandelisamethods
AT westburyh effectofsampledegradationandrnastabilizationonclassicalswinefevervirusrtpcrandelisamethods