Abstract

Taura syndrome is a World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)-listed disease of marine shrimp that is caused by Taura syndrome virus (TSV), a single-stranded RNA virus. Here we demonstrate the utility of using 15-year-old archived Davidson’s-fixed paraffin-embedded (DFPE) shrimp tissues for TSV detection and phylogenetic analyses. Total RNA was isolated from known TSV-infected DFPE tissues using three commercially available kits and the purity and ability to detect TSV in the isolated RNA were compared. TSV was successfully detected through RT-qPCR in all the tested samples. Among the TSV-specific primers screened through RT-PCR, primer pair TSV-20 for the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp), primers TSV-15 and TSV-16 for the capsid protein gene VP2 and primers TSV-5 for the capsid protein gene VP1 amplified the highest number of samples. To assess the phylogenetic relation among different TSV isolates, the VP1 gene was amplified and sequenced in overlapping segments. Concatenated sequences from smaller fragments were taken for phylogenetic analyses. The results showed that the TSV isolates from this study generally clustered with homologous isolates from the corresponding geographical regions indicating RNA derived from DFPE tissues can be used for pathogen detection and retrospective analyses. The ability to perform genomic characterization from archived tissue will expedite pathogen discovery, development of diagnostic tools and prevent disease spread in shrimp and potentially other aquaculture species worldwide.

Highlights

  • The results showed that the Taura syndrome virus (TSV) isolates from this study generally clustered with homologous isolates from the corresponding geographical regions indicating RNA derived from Davidson’s-fixed paraffin-embedded (DFPE) tissues can be used for pathogen detection and retrospective analyses

  • Taura syndrome (TS), caused by Taura syndrome virus (TSV) is a disease of penaeid shrimp that is estimated to have caused between USD 1.2–2 billion worth of economic losses in the Americas during its widespread panzootic between 1992 and 1996 [1,2,3]

  • The severity of the TSV infection was graded based on a semi-quantitative scale that ranged from Grade 0 to Grade 4 [12]

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Summary

Introduction

Taura syndrome (TS), caused by Taura syndrome virus (TSV) is a disease of penaeid shrimp that is estimated to have caused between USD 1.2–2 billion worth of economic losses in the Americas during its widespread panzootic between 1992 and 1996 [1,2,3]. Taura syndrome is a World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)-listed disease that has been detected on five continents [4]. This pathogen is a non-enveloped single-stranded RNA (~10 kb genome) containing a virus classified as a member of the family Dicistroviridae, genus Aparavirus [5]. Davidson’s-fixed paraffin-embedded (DFPE) tissues are considered prized biological samples for histological analysis. These samples are often the only tissues available for retrospective studies, yet no work has been done with the detection of RNA viral pathogens from archived DFPE shrimp tissues.

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