1. Quantitation of human astrovirus by real-time reverse-transcription-polymerase chain reaction to examine correlation with clinical illness.
- Author
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Zhang Z, Mitchell DK, Afflerbach C, Jakab F, Walter J, Zhang YJ, Staat MA, Azimi P, and Matson DO
- Subjects
- Astroviridae Infections complications, Astroviridae Infections diagnosis, Benzothiazoles, Caco-2 Cells, Child, Diamines, Humans, Mamastrovirus genetics, Mamastrovirus growth & development, Organic Chemicals, Quinolines, RNA, Viral genetics, Rotavirus Infections complications, Astroviridae Infections virology, Colony Count, Microbial methods, Mamastrovirus isolation & purification, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction methods
- Abstract
Human astroviruses (HAstVs) cause gastroenteritis. Real-time, reverse-transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT2-PCR) was developed to quantitate HAstV RNA. An 88 bp amplicon from the conserved 3' genomic region was detected by binding of SYBR Green. RT2-PCR was reproducible, with a correlation coefficient of 0.998-1.00 and PCR efficiency of 94.4-100% (mean 97%). The coefficient of variation was 0.6-2.5%, dynamic range with RNA standard up to 5 x 10(8) RNA copies (RNACN) and sensitivity 5 RNACN. Of 54 blinded, archived stool samples from children hospitalized because of gastroenteritis tested by RT-PCR, 49 (91%) agreed by RT2-PCR for HAstV-positivity (Cohen kappa=0.81, 95%CI 0.66-0.97). HAstV RNACN in stools ranged from 7.6 x 10(1) to 3.6 x 10(14)copies/0.1g. Children coinfected with rotavirus had lower RNACN (mean log 4.22/standard deviation=2.26) than those without coinfection (7.57/3.06; p=.019). Children taking infant formula also had lower RNACN (5.96/2.98) than breast-fed or weaned children (8.73/2.92; p=.027). Higher RNACN tended to occur with longer duration of diarrhea for the episode (r=0.49, p=.064), but was not associated with change in age, gender, illness day, severity or breast-feeding. RT2-PCR quantitated HAstV RNA and RNACN in stool correlates with features of clinical illness.
- Published
- 2006
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