Abstract
The genus Orthopoxvirus contains several species of related viruses, including the causative agent of smallpox (Variola virus). In addition to smallpox, several other members of the genus are capable of causing human infection, including monkeypox, cowpox, and other zoonotic rodent-borne poxviruses. Therefore, a single assay that can accurately identify all orthopoxviruses could provide a valuable tool for rapid broad orthopovirus identification. We have developed a pan-Orthopoxvirus assay for identification of all members of the genus based on four PCR reactions targeting Orthopoxvirus DNA and RNA helicase and polymerase genes. The amplicons are detected using electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (PCR/ESI-MS) on the Ibis T5000 system. We demonstrate that the assay can detect and identify a diverse collection of orthopoxviruses, provide sub-species information and characterize viruses from the blood of rabbitpox infected rabbits. The assay is sensitive at the stochastic limit of PCR and detected virus in blood containing approximately six plaque-forming units per milliliter from a rabbitpox virus-infected rabbit.
Introduction
The orthopoxviruses (family Poxviridae, genus Orthopoxvirus) are a diverse group of large, enveloped viruses that contain a covalently closed, double-stranded DNA genome of approximately 200 kbp [1]. The genus is comprised of at least 10 recognized species. Several viruses within this group are significant human pathogens, including Variola virus (the causative agent of smallpox), monkeypox virus, cowpox virus, and Vaccinia virus. Other members, including raccoonpox, camelpox, ectromelia (mousepox), taterapox, and volepox viruses have only been isolated from their respective mammalian hosts. Although many orthopoxviruses specifically infect certain animal hosts, others (e.g., monkeypox and cowpox viruses) can also infect humans and are considered zoonotic pathogens. In humans, symptoms of orthopoxvirus infections range from mild skin lesions to fatal systemic disease. For example, smallpox produced a generalized rash that progressed from the papular to vesicular to pustular stages and resulted in a greater than 30% mortality rate in unvaccinated persons [2]. Although naturally-occurring smallpox was eradicated nearly three decades ago [3], official stocks of the virus still remain in two locations, one at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, GA and the other at the State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology, Novosibirsk, Russia. This, in addition to waning immunity against smallpox within the human population, has led to concerns that Variola virus might be used as a bioweapon [4].
Monkeypox virus causes a disease similar to smallpox in humans, but results in a lower fatality rate [5]. Monkeypox virus is primarily transmitted to humans through direct contact with infected animals, generally various species of rodents or squirrels in the rain forests of central Africa. However, additional attention was brought to bear on this virus when, in the spring of 2003, it emerged for the first time in the Western Hemisphere and caused a cluster of cases in the U.S. Midwest [6].
Vaccinia virus is famous for being the vaccine that was used to eradicate smallpox. It was also the first animal virus to be purified and chemically analyzed and was the first to be genetically engineered [7]. Despite its notoriety, however, its origin and natural history remain obscure. Recent evidence suggests that Vaccinia virus and horsepox virus are very similar phylogenetically and share a relatively recent common ancestor [8]. Vaccinia virus is often confused with cowpox virus; although it is now well established that they are distinct virus species [9]. In fact, cowpox virus is considered a zoonotic pathogen and is seen in a broad range of host species, most notable wild rodents, but rarely in cattle, as its name would imply. Interestingly, wild and domestic cats and elephants appear to be highly susceptible to infection with cowpox virus [9]. Numerous recent studies have uncovered several novel vaccinia-like viruses that have caused zoonotic outbreaks in Brazil [10], [11], [12], [13], [14], [15], [16]. It is likely that as various ecological niches are examined further, even more species of Orthopoxvirus will be identified.
Several genus-specific assays have been described for the detecting and discriminating various Orthopoxvirus members that require conventional PCR followed by restriction endonuclease digestion and subsequent gel electrophoresis [17], [18]. More recently, several real-time LightCycler-based PCR assays have been developed for pan-Orthopoxvirus or specific orthopoxvirus species detection [19], [20], [21]. For these assays, differentiation of the various orthopoxvirus species requires the use of different TaqMan probes in separate reactions or melt-curve analysis of hybridization probes. Here, we describe a rapid, high-throughput, multi-locus method for identifying orthopoxviruses based on PCR amplification followed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (PCR/ESI-MS) performed on the Ibis T5000 instrument [22], [23], [24], [25]. This technology has been applied to detection and identification of other viral pathogens, including alphaviruses [26], influenza viruses [27], adenovirus [28], and coronaviruses [29]. The assay described here is extremely sensitive and able to detect and identify each species from a diverse collection of orthopoxviruses.
Results
Orthopoxvirus PCR primer pairs
The genus Orthopoxvirus consists of least 10 species. The goal of this work was to develop a simple assay that would allow the detection of all of the diverse members of this group of viruses. Several sets of primers were evaluated for their analytical sensitivity, pan-Orthpoxvirus coverage and performance under uniform PCR conditions. Four primer pairs were chosen for use in the final assay format (Table 1). Several of the primers have non-homologous nucleotides at their 5′ ends to raise the temperature of melting (Tm) of the primers after the first round of amplification as orthopoxviruses have a low GC genome. Primer Pair VIR982 exhibited the greatest analytical sensitivity of the four primers in the assay. Figure 1 shows the alignment of this primer pair against the known sequences of several diverse orthopoxviruses. For each primer region, a database of expected base compositions (A, G, C, and T base counts) from all known orthopoxvirus sequences in GenBank was generated (data not shown) and used in the identification and classification of the test isolates.
Table 1. PCR primers used in this study.
Primer pair ID | Primer code | Gene target | Primer sequence (5′-3′) | 3′ nt position* |
VIR982 | VIR2545F | DNA polymerase | TCGGTGACGATACTACGGACGC | 46717 |
VIR2546R | TCCTCCCTCCCATCTTTACGAATTACTTTAC | 46645 | ||
VIR985 | VIR2550F | RNA helicase | TGGAAAGTATCTCCTCCATCACTAGGAAAACC | 58378 |
VIR2551R | TCCCTCCCTCCCTATAACATTCAAAGCTTATTG | 58426 | ||
VIR979 | VIR2539F | DNA helicase | TGATTTCGTAGAAGTTGAACCGGGATCA | 117490 |
VIR2540R | TCGCGATTTTATTATCGGTCGTTGTTAATGT | 117560 | ||
VIR988 | VIR2556F | RNA polymerase | TCCTCCTCGCGATAATAGATAGTGCTAAACG | 123174 |
VIR2557R | TGTGTTCAGCTTCCACCAGGTCATTAA | 123216 |
Position of 3′ nucleotide against reference genome: Variola major, Syria 1972, DQ437592.
Based upon the predicted and experimentally determined amplicons, these primers effectively resolve all known Orthopoxvirus species from one another. All experimentally determined base-count signatures were found to agree with bioinformatically predicted signatures based upon published genomic sequences.
Detection of diverse orthopoxvirus isolates
As shown in Figure 2, all of the four primer pairs produce amplicon that can distinguish Variola virus from any other orthopoxvirus. Primer pair VIR979 could resolve Variola major virus from Variola minor virus and camelpox strain CMS from strain M-96. Primer pairs VIR982, VIR985 and VIR988 could resolve the two strains of monkeypox tested: VR-267 and Zaire-96-1-16. All of the vaccinia isolates tested including rabbitpox and horsepox, which are sub-species of vaccinia, have a common base count signature for primer pair VIR9888 ( 34A, 16G, 19C, 30T). Vaccinia, Copenhagen strain and horsepox (gi|111184167) can be distinguished from each other and other vaccinia isolates based upon their unique base-count signatures for primers pairs VIR985 and VIR979.
In addition to providing sub-species resolution, the use of four PCR primers in the assay enabled the detection and identification of an orthopoxvirus at the stochastic limit of PCR: 4–8 copies/PCR reaction. For example if only 4–8 genomes/PCR are used in the assay there is a very high probability that at least one of the four primers would detect the virus and provide information sufficient for its identification.
The assay is specific to Orthopoxvirus. Nucleic acid extracts from the blood of non-infected rabbits (N = 4) and humans (20 ng and 500 ng/PCR reaction) failed to produce an amplicon other than the internal positive controls. As expected, swinepox, a suipoxvirus (ATCC VR-363), in the family Poxviridae failed produce an amplicon other than the internal positive controls using the assay. We further tested a panel of DNA viruses in the assay to further define specificity including HSV1, adenovirus types 1, 5, 8, 4, 7A, varicella zoster virus (VZV), HPV16 & 18, human parvo virus B19, BK virus and JC virus. None of these viruses cross-reacted using the assay.
Analytical sensitivity and detection of virus in biological samples
To test the analytical sensitivity of the assay for Variola virus we performed a dilution to extinction using the Variola virus derived calibrant. The calibrant was quantified by OD260 and diluted down to determine the limit of detection by the assay. The calibrant is present in every PCR reaction at 100 copies.
Blood extract from rabbitpox-infected rabbits was taken six days after exposure to aerosolized rabbitpox virus. The first blood sample evaluated (sample ID: 3E-day 6) was found to have 4×103 plaque forming units (PFU) per mL of blood as determined by a plaque assay on Vero cells. DNA extract from this sample was analyzed by real-time PCR and found to contain 4×106 genomes/mL of blood, assuming 100% extraction efficiency. Blood taken on the 6th day post infection from a second infected rabbit (sample ID: 3D-day6) had 3.3×102 PFU/mL blood and 2.5×105 genomes/mL blood. The most sensitive primer pair, VIR985, detected eight genomic copies of rabbitpox genome isolated from infected rabbit blood with 100% efficiency in 10 out 10 PCR replicates, which is near or at the stochastic limits of PCR detection. The viral PFU in this blood samples was determined prior to DNA extraction and the diluted DNA extract would equate to less than 2 PFU/mL of blood. The three additional primer pairs are sensitive to 30 genomes per PCR reaction, which corresponds to a detection of 6.3 PFU/mL of blood, with 100% detection in 10 out 10 PCR replicates and provide added sub-species information and redundancy to the assay (Figure 3).
Discussion
Today, orthopoxviruses are principally rare zoonotic pathogens, but historically Variola was a devastating human pathogen [30]. Though Variola virus has been eradicated there is still the potential for its reintroduction into the human population through an act of bioterrorism. It is also possible that a zoonotic orthopoxvirus could emerge as a variola-like virus of humans or be used as a bioterrorist agent. A single assay that can detect and identify all orthopoxviruses is critical for effective surveillance. Though several methods exist for the detection and surveillance of orthopoxvirus, these assays are limited in their coverage or require large numbers of reactions to identify all Orthopoxvirus species. In this study, we describe an assay using four PCR primer pairs that can identify and distinguish all orthopox species and can provide subspecies level of identification of several important orthopoxviruses. Our primers target the highly conserved core viral DNA and RNA polymerase and helicase genes and thus it is very likely that novel orthopox viruses will also be detected using this strategy.
In this study we tested the assay on a diverse panel of orthopoxviruses and also tested detection of rabbitpox from infected rabbits. Rabbitpox is a vaccinia virus but does not infect humans and therefore is an ideal model for studying human smallpox [31]. There was a 1,000-fold difference between PFU and genome levels from the blood samples studied; this also was true for several samples from different animals and probably represents a high level of non-viable or replicating virus in the blood. Similarly high genome to PFU ratios was observed for other viruses [32].
Overall we demonstrated that the pan-Orthopoxvirus assay can detect a wide and diverse range of orthopoxvirus and can be used to accurately speciate orthopoxvirus. The assay is simple and can be performed using premade PCR plates that contain all reaction components except genome. After extraction, the samples can be processed from PCR through analysis and reporting in five hours. Using the described assay, a single 96 well PCR plate can be used to analyze 24 samples and the system can process 16 plates in a 24 hour period for a total throughput of 384 samples per day on a single instrument. Such throughput is essential for surveillance and in times of an epidemic outbreak or acts of bioterrorism.
Materials and Methods
Viral isolates and DNA extraction
The viral strains used in this study were provided by the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), the American type culture collection (ATCC), or the Biodefense and Emerging Infections Research Resources Repository (BEI Resources) and are listed in Table 2. Samples from BEI resources were supplied as DNA extracts. DNA from viral isolates from USAMRIID and ATCC were extracted using the QiaAmp MinElute Virus spin kit (Third Edition, February 2007 version) according to the manufacturers recommended procedure (Qiagen Inc, Valencia, CA).
Table 2. Orthopoxvirus species/strains used in this study.
Virus species | Strain | Year of isolation | Origin | Source |
Camelpox virus | 903 | 1978 | Somalia | USAMRIID |
Cowpox virus | Brighton Red | 1938 | Great Britain | BEI NR-2641 |
Ectromelia virus | Moscow | ? | ? | ATCC; VR-1374 |
Monkeypox virus | VR-267 | 1962 | West Africa | USAMRIID |
Zaire-96-I-16 | 1996 | Zaire, Africa | USAMRIID | |
Rabbitpox virus | Utrecht | 1941 | Holland | ATCC; VR-157 |
Raccoonpox virus | Herman | 1964 | Maryland, USA | ATCC; VR-838 |
Vaccinia virus | Western Reserve | 1941 | Cleveland, Ohio, USA | BEI NR-2640 |
R1352 | ? | ? | USAMRIID | |
Copenhagen | ? | Denmark | USAMRIID | |
Ankara | 1954 | Ankara, Turkey | USAMRIID | |
RPmuhr23HA+ | 1993 | Florida, USA | ATCC; VR-2379 | |
Vtk-79 | ? | ? | ATCC; VR-2031 | |
A5 | ? | ? | USAMRIID | |
Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) | 1971 | Munich, Germany | BEI NR-2634 | |
Lister | 1892 | Elsetree, London | BEI NR-2635 | |
IHD | 1954 | New York City Department of Health | BEI NR-2636 | |
Lederle | ? | ? | BEI NR-2637 | |
NYCBH | 1856 | England | BEI NR-2638 |
Rabbitpox virus-infected rabbits
Viral extracts from rabbitpox virus-infected rabbits were obtained from USAMRIID. Rabbits were bled every other day after challenge with aerosolized rabbitpox virus. Blood was collected into EDTA tubes and 100 µL of blood was used to isolate viral DNA with the BioRobot M48 (Qiagen) using the QIAamp blood kit (Qiagen version February 2003) in accordance with manufacturer's instructions. Real-time PCR was carried out with the LightCycler (Roche, Indianapolis, IN) using a pan-Orthopoxvirus assay as previously described [20]. Briefly, the oligonucleotide primers and a minor groove binder (MGB) protein-containing TaqMan probe were designed to hybridize to conserved regions of the orthopoxvirus hemagglutinin (HA) gene; sequences have been published elsewhere [20]. Reactions were performed on a Roche LightCycler. Virus was quantified using standards based on the cloned Orthopoxvirus HA (J7R) gene were calculated using the LightCycler software version 4.0 as described by Kulesh et al[33]. Viral titers were determined by plaque assay on Vero cells grown in Earle's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum.
Primer design
Four primer pairs were designed to target the DNA and RNA polymerase genes and the DNA and RNA helicase genes in the conserved core region of viruses within the family Poxviridae (Table 1). Each of these primers generated an amplicon from any orthopoxvirus DNA template tested. All primers used in this study had a thymine nucleotide at the 5′-end to minimize addition of non-templated adenosines during amplification using Taq polymerase [34].
PCR
The PCR reaction mix consisted of 2.4 U of Faststart Taq polymerase (Roche Applied Science, Indianapolis, IN), 20 mM Tris (pH 8.3), 75 mM KCl; 1.5 mM MgCl2; 0.4 M betaine; 800 µM equal mix of dCTP, dTTP, dGTP, and dATP; and 250 nM of each primer. The following PCR cycling conditions were used on MJ dyad 96-well thermocyclers (Bio-Rad Inc. Hercules, CA): 95°C for 10 min, followed by 8 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 48°C for 30 s, and 72°C 30 s, with the 48°C annealing temperature increasing 0.9°C each cycle. The PCR was then continued for 37 additional cycles of 95°C for 15 s, 56°C for 20 s, and 72°C for 20 s. The PCR cycle ended with a final extension of 2 min at 72°C followed by a 4°C hold.
Internal positive control DNA
An internal positive control (calibrant) made from synthetic DNA (BlueHeron Biotechnology, Bothell, WA) was included in each PCR reaction at an experimentally determined concentration (100 copies/PCR reaction). The calibrant was based upon the primer target region of Variola major virus (gi|9627521) and served as our test surrogate for this virus. The calibrant sequence contains a five-base pair (bp) deletion within the amplicon so that the calibrant amplicons could readily be resolved from the viral template-derived amplicon.
Mass spectrometry and base composition analysis
After amplification, 30 µL aliquots of each PCR reaction were desalted and purified by using a weak anion exchange protocol described elsewhere. [22]. Accurate mass (±1 ppm), high-resolution (M/dM>100,000 FWHM) mass spectra were acquired for each sample using high-throughput ESI-MS protocols described previously [24]. For each sample, approximately 1.5 µL of analyte solution was consumed during the 74-second spectral acquisition. Raw mass spectra were post-calibrated with an internal mass standard and deconvolved to monoisotopic molecular masses. Unambiguous base compositions were derived from the exact mass measurements of the complementary single-stranded oligonucleotides [35] . Quantitative results were obtained by comparing the peak heights with the calibrant present in every PCR well at 100 molecules as previously described for other Ibis T5000 assays [24].
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Carson Baldwin and Nicole Garza for their excellent technical assistance. This manuscript is approved for public release, distribution unlimited.
Animal Use Disclaimer
Research was conducted in compliance with the Animal Welfare Act and other federal statues and regulations related to animals and experiments involving animals and adhered to principles stated in the guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, National Research Council, 1996. The facility where this research was conducted is fully accredited by the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International.
Footnotes
Competing Interests: M.W.E. is employed by Ibis Biosciences which manufactures the instruments and reagents used in this manuscript. Several of the co-authors are or were Ibis employees.
Funding: The authors acknowledge the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) contract number W81XWH-05-C-0116, the U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) (USAMRIID Research Plan #114538), and the Office of Biodefense Research Affairs (OBRA) National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (interagency agreement A120-B12) for financial support. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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