Detection of African swine fever virus by a biotinylated DNA probe: assay on cell cultures and field samples.
Parole chiave
Astratto
African swine fever virus was detected in various samples using a molecular hybridization technique. A fragment located in a constant area of the viral genome was biotin-labelled. This probe, when present at a concentration of 100 ng/ml of the hybridization solution, could detect 10 pg of target DNA immobilized on nitrocellulose with cellular DNA and RNA. The virus was evidenced after being passaged on monkey kidney cells, either 8 h post-inoculation (pi) if the multiplicity of infection (MOI) was at least 1 hemadsorbing unit (HAd) per cell, or 24 h later if the inoculum was diluted up to 10(-3) HAd per cell. When passaged on pig leukocytes with a MOI of 0.1 HAd per cell, the virus was evidenced 12 h pi, or 24 h pi with a MOI of 10(-2) HAd per cell. The probe did not hybridize with another DNA virus passaged on cells, neither did it react with non-infected blood or ham, but did so if African swine fever virus was resuspended with the samples. The spleen from uninfected pig and the lymph nodes from a pig which had died from hog cholera were found to be negative, whereas the spleen from a pig which had died of African swine fever was positive. These samples were also tested with a 32P-labelled probe whose sensitivity was 10-fold higher. A non-radioactive probe could be used both for the sensitive and specific diagnosis of African swine fever and the detection of the virus in an epidemiological survey.