A novel pair of universal primers was developed to detect potyvirus species after conserved sites were identified using all fulllength potyvirus sequences available by 2005. The breadth of specificity of the new primers, NIb2F and NIb3R, was investigated and compared with the specificity of two routinely used primer pairs in plant virus diagnostic laboratories. RNA from 40 potyvirus isolates representing 23 recognized and three possible new species was tested. Reactions with NIb2F and NIb3R produced amplicons of 350 bp from all 40 virus isolates tested. Reactions with the previously published WCIEN and Potyvirid primers amplified cDNA from 32 and 21 isolates, representing possibly 21 and 15 species, respectively. The identity of 12 unknown potyvirus isolates was confirmed by sequencing and three were found to be potentially distinct potyvirus species. Gel banding patterns from reactions with NIb2F and NIb3R were simpler to interpret than those from reactions with the other two primer sets; fewer products were visible and the cDNA fragments were less variable in size. RT-PCR with the novel primers is predicted to be able to detect virus isolates from all major groups within the genus Potyvirus and its reliability makes it well suited for use as a routine diagnostic assay.
Unknown and foreign viruses can be detected using degenerate primers targeted at conserved sites in the known viral gene sequences. Conserved sites are found by comparing sequences and so the usefulness of a set of primers depends crucially on how well the known sequences represent the target group including unknown sequences.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe developed a method for assessing the apparent stability of consensus sequences at sites over time using deposition dates from Genbank. We tested the method using 17 conserved sites in potyvirus genomes. The accumulation of knowledge of sequence variants over 20 years caused ‘consensus decay’ of the sites. Rates of decay were rapid at all sites but varied widely and as a result, the ranking of the most conserved sites changed. The discovery and reporting of sequences from previously unknown and distinct species, rather than from strains of known species, dominated the decay, indicating it was largely a sampling effect related to the progressive discovery of species, and recent virus mutation was probably only a minor contributing factor.Conclusion/SignificanceWe showed that in the past, the sampling bias has misled the choice of the most conserved target sites for genus specific degenerate primers. The history of sequence discoveries indicates primer designs should be updated regularly and provides an additional dimension for improving the design of degenerate primers.
LAMP assays are targeted molecular tests for the rapid detection of species in the laboratory and field. We developed a LAMP assay for an economically important fruit fly species, Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni. This assay was assessed against a broad panel of target and non-target species and found to be specific, only amplifying the target species and closest relatives, in a portable real-time fluorometer (Genie III) in under 15 minutes with an anneal derivative temperature of 82.5 o c. the assay is sensitive to low levels of target DNA (>0.016 ng/µl), performing equally to the existing qPCR test. To enable retention of a physical voucher specimen, for potential morphological confirmation of LAMP results, a novel whole-specimen non-destructive DNA extraction method was developed, suitable for LAMP in the field. The stability of DNA extraction and LAMP reagents was tested under simulated and actual field conditions and shown to be robust. Our new assay now provides a portable molecular tool for the detection of this significant tephritid fruit fly pest species of biosecurity/quarantine concern. This has already proven invaluable for in-field diagnostics, providing real-time support influencing immediate actions, with negative results allowing the release of fruit produce, and positive results initiating fruit fly control measures.
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