Choice of molecular assay determines ranavirus detection probability and inferences about prevalence and occurrence
Author(s) -
Felicity Wynne,
Robert Puschendorf,
M. E. KNIGHT,
SJ Price
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
diseases of aquatic organisms
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.545
H-Index - 99
eISSN - 1616-1580
pISSN - 0177-5103
DOI - 10.3354/dao03518
Subject(s) - ranavirus , biology , virology , amplicon , context (archaeology) , polymerase chain reaction , population , gold standard (test) , serial dilution , false positive paradox , virus , genetics , gene , medicine , paleontology , demography , statistics , mathematics , alternative medicine , machine learning , computer science , pathology , sociology
Ranaviruses are emerging pathogens that can cause morbidity, mortality and population declines in ectothermic hosts; however, there is no standardized approach to diagnostics. Here, we compared the inter-assay variation and intra-assay precision among 2 commonly used quantitative PCRs (qPCRs), a conventional and a nested PCR assay (used as a gold standard), using laboratory-propagated ranavirus (FV3 and CMTV) and field-collected samples. A qPCR assay ('Leung') detected viral DNA in dilutions 2 orders of magnitude lower than other assays regardless of the viral lineage of the cultured isolate (FV3/CMTV). The second qPCR ('Brunner') was slightly more sensitive than the conventional PCR ('Mao' assay). For field samples, the Leung qPCR detected all known positives, while the Mao assay PCR only detected 2.5% of the positive samples. Amplicon sequences from the 2 conventional PCRs were shown to be useful for inferring viral lineage. Inaccurate results will bias estimates of the distribution and prevalence of ranaviruses, and together these findings emphasize that molecular assays should be chosen carefully in the context of study aims.
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