Abstract

Bovine rotavirus (BRV), bovine parvovirus (BPV), and bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) are the pathogens that cause diarrhea primarily in newborn calves. A mixed infection of BRV, BPV, and BVDV makes clinical diagnosis difficult. In this study, we designed dual-priming oligonucleotide (DPO) primers the VP6 gene of BRV, VP2 gene of BPV, and 5′UTR gene of BVDV and synthesized gold nanoparticles (GNPs) with an average diameter of 10 nm. We combined the DPOs with the GNPs to develop a DPO-nanoPCR assay for detecting BRV, BPV, and BVDV. The annealing temperature, primer concentration, and GNP concentration were optimized for this assay. Compared to a conventional PCR assay, the DPO-nanoPCR assay allowed the use of a wider range of annealing temperatures (41–65°C) to effectively amplify target genes. PCR amplification was the most efficient at 56.2°C using conventional primers. The optimal volume of all the primers (10 μM) was 1.0 μL. The optimal volume of GNPs (10 nM) for all the reactions was 0.5 μL. The detection limits of DPO-nanoPCR for pMD19-T-VP6, pMD19-T-VP2, and pMD19-T-5′UTR were 9.40 × 102 copies/μL, 5.14 × 103 copies/μL, and 4.09 × 101 copies/μL, respectively; and those using conventional PCR were 9.40 × 104 copies/μL, 5.14 × 105 copies/μL, and 4.09 × 104 copies/μL, respectively. The sensitivity of DPO-nanoPCR was at least 100-fold higher than that of conventional PCR. The specificity detection showed that the DPO-nanoPCR was able to specifically detect BRV, BPV, and BVDV. Use of clinical samples indicated that target viruses can be detected accurately. Thus, DPO-nanoPCR is a new powerful, simple, specific, and sensitive tool for detecting mixed infections of BRV, BPV, and BVDV.

Highlights

  • Bovine rotavirus (BRV) belongs to the genus Rotavirus in the family Reoviridae (Swiatek et al, 2010)

  • The results showed that dual-priming oligonucleotide (DPO)-nanoPCR could not amplify any of the other five viruses except BRV, bovine parvovirus (BPV), and bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) (Figure 7), indicating that the assay is specific

  • Sequence analysis showed high similarity (100%) between the reference sequences of the target viruses and the DPO-nanoPCR amplicons. All these results indicated that DPO-nanoPCR assay is more sensitive than conventional PCR

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Summary

Introduction

Bovine rotavirus (BRV) belongs to the genus Rotavirus in the family Reoviridae (Swiatek et al, 2010). BRV infection primarily occurs in calves between 15 and 45 days of age. The clinical symptoms include depression, loss of appetite, diarrhea, and dehydration. The rotavirus particle core has 11 doublestranded RNA segments (Crawford et al, 2017). The six structural proteins that have been identified are: VP1, VP2, VP3, VP4, VP6, and VP7. VP6 accounts for ∼51% of the total viral protein content. VP6 from group A rotavirus is highly conserved between the different serotypes with >90% amino acid sequence homology that enables it to be the major diagnostic antigen (Dennehy, 2015; Shepherd et al, 2018)

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