Abstract

We have developed a hybridization assay that permits distinction of rotavirus serotypes 1, 2, 3, and 4. The serotype of rotaviruses from stool samples or tissue culture was recognized by hybridization of specific probes to (i) blots of viral double-stranded RNAs electrophoresed in agarose gels (Northern blots) or (ii) heat-denatured double-stranded RNAs directly dotted on nylon membranes. The probes consisted of 32P-labeled cDNA synthesized by reverse transcription of in vitro derived rotavirus mRNA from rotavirus serotypes 1 to 4. To prepare these probes, mRNAs were primed with a 17-mer nucleotide common to all four serotypes whose sequence is complementary to bases 375 to 391 of the rotavirus gene encoding the VP7 glycoprotein (gene 8 or 9 depending on the rotavirus strain). The resulting downstream transcripts encompassed areas of major sequence divergence among the four serotypes. Hybridization at high stringency (50 degrees C, 50% formamide, 4 x SSC [1 x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate]) was performed for 16 to 48 h. Autoradiograms of the washed membranes allowed recognition of the rotavirus serotype present in the blotted or dotted specimens since each of them hybridized preferentially to one of the four probes. Twenty-four laboratory specimens and 103 clinical specimens from Washington, D.C., Venezuela, and Chile were "serotyped" with this assay. The results were similar to those obtained with a monoclonal antibody serotyping assay.

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