Artículo de revista
Respiratory syncytial virus detection by dot blot hybridization with a nonradioactive synthetic oligo deoxynucleotide probe
Fecha
1992Registro en:
Journal of Medical Virology, Volumen 37, Issue 3, 2018, Pages 165-169
10969071
01466615
10.1002/jmv.1890370303
Autor
Hernández, Oscar
Fernandez, Jorge
Valenzuela, Sofia
Sandino, Ana Maria
Pizarro, Jaqueline
Vasquez, Monica
Yudelevich, Arturo
Spencer, Eugenio
Institución
Resumen
A synthetic oligodeoxynucleotide corresponding to a region of the nucleocapside gene (N) of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), was used as a DNA probe to develop a nonradioactive hybridization assay for the detection of RSV. The probe was labeled by incorporation of biotin‐7‐dATP to the 3′ end by a reaction catalyzed by terminal deoxynucleotydil transferase. The dot blot hybridization assay was found to be specific for RSV when tested against RSV isolates (subgroups A and B) obtained from cell cultures and isolates of adenovirus, reovirus, rotavirus, and pararotavirus. The assay detected both RSV subgroups (A and B) without significant differences. The dot blot hybridization assay using the nonradioactive probe led to similar results to indirect immunofluorescence (IFI) when tested against a panel of 64 clinical samples from nasopharyngeal secretions of infants with clinical symptoms of respiratory disease. This assay may provide the basis for a rapid, simple, and inexpensive method fo