Use of a blockade-of-binding ELISA and microneutralization assay to evaluate Zika virus serostatus in dengue-endemic areas

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Abstract

Zika virus (ZIKV) serological diagnostics are compromised in areas where dengue viruses (DENV) co-circulate because of their high levels of protein sequence homology. Here, we describe the characterization of a Zika blockade-of-binding ELISA (Zika BOB) and a Zika microneutralization assay (Zika MN) for the detection of ZIKV nonstructural protein 1 (NS1)–specific antibodies and ZIKV neutralizing antibodies, respectively. Zika BOB and Zika MN cutoffs were established as 10 and 100 endpoint titers, respectively, using samples collected pre- and post-virologically confirmed ZIKV infection from subjects living in DENV-endemic areas. Specificity of the assays was equally high, whereas sensitivity of Zika BOB was lower than that of Zika MN, especially in samples collected > 6 months post-infection. Immunosurveillance analysis, using combined results from both Zika BOB and Zika MN, carried out also in DENV-endemic regions in Colombia, Honduras, Mexico, and Puerto Rico before (2013–2014) and after (2017–2018) ZIKV introduction in the Americas suggests unapparent ZIKV seroprevalence rates ranged from 25% to 80% over the specified period of time in the regions investigated.

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Nascimento, E. J. M., Bonaparte, M. I., Luo, P., Vincent, T. S., Hu, B., George, J. K., … Huleatt, J. W. (2019). Use of a blockade-of-binding ELISA and microneutralization assay to evaluate Zika virus serostatus in dengue-endemic areas. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 101(3), 708–715. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.19-0270

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