The addition of Earle's balanced salt solution (EBSS) of amino acids that are transported by a Na+-dependent cotransport system was not required by Vero cells for ornithine decarboxylase (ODC:EC 4.1.1.17) amplification. Vero cell ODC activity was elevated tenfold above basal levels when confluent cells were incubated for 5 hr in EBSS alone. ODC activity increased as a function of the incubation time in EBSS and was not elevated above basal enzyme levels when cells were incubated in EBSS minus glucose. ODC expression increased as a function of the glucose concentration in EBSS, with 20 mM glucose producing a 90-fold increase in ODC activity. ODC expression is more responsive to glucose in high-density quiescent cultures than in low-density growing cultures. Enhanced ODC expression by glucose depended on Na+ and K+ concentrations. The specific activity of ODC was also elevated above basal levels when mannose or fructose replaced glucose in EBSS. The addition of alanine or asparagine to EBSS enhanced ODC activity above levels obtained with EBSS containing standard (5.5 mM) glucose concentrations. In the absence of glucose, alanine was more effective than asparagine in enhancing ODC expression. These results suggest that the transport of amino acids is not an absolute requirement for Vero cell ODC expression and that ODC expression is linked to changes in cellular energetics and/or ion fluxes.
With the availability of ribavirin therapy for serious respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections, rapid diagnostic tests for the detection of RSV antigen are increasingly important. Efficacies of a commercially available enzyme immunoassay (EIA) (Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Ill.) and a fluorescent-antibody assay (FA) were evaluated in a study involving 135 specimens from children with respiratory symptoms. A nasal wash specimen was cultured immediately on RSV-sensitive A549 cells; the nasal wash was also used for EIA. FA was performed on a nasopharyngeal swab specimen with bovine anti-RSV and anti-bovine immunoglobulin G antisera (Burroughs Wellcome Co., Research Triangle Park, N.C.). A total of 39 specimens (28%) were tissue culture positive, including 35 EIA-positive and 37 FA-positive samples (sensitivities, 90 and 95%, respectively). AU 96 tissue culture-negative specimens were EIA negative (specificity, 100%); 94 of these 96 specimens were FA negative (specificity, 98%). Positive and negative predictive values for the tests were as follows: 100 and 96% for EIA, respectively, and 95 and 98% for FA, respectively. Other viruses, including influenza A virus, adenovirus, enterovirus, and herpes simplex virus, were isolated in nine cases. One adenovirus-positive specimen had a false-positive RSV FA result; ail nine specimens were RSV EIA negative. Both tests performed well in our study and provide cost-effective alternatives to tissue culture. The RSV EIA, in particular, uses standard serologic techniques and equipment and does not require expertise in virology. More widespread availability of rapid diagnostic tests for RSV will hopefully result in early and appropriate use of antiviral therapy in patients at risk for serious RSV infections.
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