1. A quantitative, real-time polymerase chain reaction assay for beak and feather disease virus.
- Author
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Shearer PL, Sharp M, Bonne N, Clark P, and Raidal SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Bird Diseases blood, Bird Diseases virology, Birds, Circoviridae Infections blood, Circoviridae Infections diagnosis, Circoviridae Infections virology, Circovirus genetics, Conserved Sequence, DNA, Viral blood, DNA, Viral isolation & purification, Feathers virology, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Viral Load, Bird Diseases diagnosis, Circoviridae Infections veterinary, Circovirus isolation & purification, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction methods
- Abstract
PCR-based assays for the detection of BFDV DNA are in widespread use throughout the world. Quantitative real-time PCR assays are extremely sensitive and have the advantages over standard PCR assays that they do not require post-reaction processing to visualise PCR products and can quantify the amount of DNA present in a sample. This study describes a quantitative real-time PCR assay for the detection of BFDV DNA, using primers designed to amplify a conserved 81 bp fragment of ORFV1 and SYTO9, a fluorescent intercalating dye. A synthetic oligonucleotide was used to make standard curves for the quantitation of viral load in blood and feather preparations. The assay was very sensitive, with a detection limit of 50 copies/microL. The assay was developed using DNA extracts from the feathers of 10 different species of birds which had tested BFDV-positive previously and was validated with blood and feather samples from corellas vaccinated with an experimental BFDV vaccine, then challenged with live virus. Viral DNA was detected consistently in the blood of all control (non-vaccinated) birds and in some vaccinated birds. Contamination of the environment with feather dander from BFDV-infected birds meant that feather preparations used for the haemagglutination assay were unreliable for the detection and quantitation of viral excretion. Nonetheless, the assay should prove to be a useful and sensitive test for the detection of viral DNA in a range of samples.
- Published
- 2009
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