Detection of infectious salmon anaemia virus by real-time nucleic acid sequence based amplification

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Abstract

We have developed a real-time nucleic acid sequence based amplification (NASBA) procedure for detection of infectious salmon anaemia virus (ISAV). Primers were designed to target a 124 nucleotide region of ISAV genome segment 8. Amplification products were detected in real-time with a molecular beacon (carboxyfluorescin [FAM]-labelled and methyl-red quenched) that recognised an internal region of the target amplicon. Amplification and detection were performed at 41°C for 90 min in a Corbett Research Rotorgene. The real-time NASBA assay was compared to a conventional RT-PCR for ISAV detection. From a panel of 45 clinical samples, both assays detected ISAV in the same 19 samples. Based on the detection of a synthetic RNA target, the real-time NASBA procedure was approximately 100x more sensitive than conventional RT-PCR. These results suggest that real-time NASBA may represent a useful diagnostic procedure for ISAV. © Inter-Research 2006.

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Starkey, W. G., Smail, D. A., Bleie, H., Muir, K. F., Ireland, J. H., & Richards, R. H. (2006). Detection of infectious salmon anaemia virus by real-time nucleic acid sequence based amplification. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 72(2), 107–113. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao072107

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