Journal of Applied Microbiology, Vol.102, No.1, 32-40, 2007
Development of molecular techniques for detection of lymphocystis disease virus in different marine fish species
Aims: The development and evaluation of a protocol based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and nucleic acid hybridization techniques for the specific detection of lymphocystis disease virus (LCDV) in several marine fish species. Methods and Results: The pair of primers for PCR, OBL3 and OBL4, was designed based on published nucleotide sequence (LCDV-1) and amplifies a fragment within the major capsid protein. The sensitivity was evaluated using DNA from purified viral particles, as well as from cells inoculated with several viral concentrations. The PCR combined with slot blot was the most sensitive methodology, detecting 2.5 ng of viral DNA. Using this methodology LCDV was detected at 5 days postinoculation from SAF-1 cells initially inoculated with 10(-5) TCID50 ml(-1). The combination of PCR with membrane hybridization has also been proved to be adequate to detect LCDV from apparently healthy carriers by means of caudal fin sample analysis. This asymptomatic infection was also demonstrated by classical virological methods (cell culture and immunoblot). Conclusions: The protocol described in this study allows the specific detection of LCDV, both in cell cultures and in fin homogenates from asymptomatic fish. Significance and Impact of the Study: The detection of asymptomatic carriers by a rapid molecular method using caudal fin sampling, which does not imply animal killing, could be an important tool to control epizootics caused by LCDV, as fish could be analysed before their introduction and/or mobilization in farm facilities.