AI Article Synopsis

  • The study highlights the lack of comprehensive seroprevalence data for SARS-CoV, despite the virus's genome being sequenced.
  • Researchers cloned and tested SARS-CoV proteins for immunogenicity with patient serum, employing ELISA and western-blot assays to confirm IgG presence.
  • Findings indicate that subclinical or non-pneumonic SARS-CoV infections are more prevalent than previously thought, suggesting a need for broader screening and understanding of the virus's impact.

Article Abstract

Background: Although the genome of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) has been sequenced and a possible animal reservoir identified, seroprevalence studies and mass screening for detection of subclinical and non-pneumonic infections are still lacking.

Methods: We cloned and purified the nucleocapsid protein and spike polypeptide of SARS-CoV and examined their immunogenicity with serum from patients with SARS-CoV pneumonia. An ELISA based on recombinant nucleocapsid protein for IgG detection was tested with serum from 149 healthy blood donors who donated 3 years previously and with serum positive for antibodies against SARS-CoV (by indirect immunofluorescence assay) from 106 patients with SARS-CoV pneumonia. The seroprevalence of SARS-CoV was studied with the ELISA in healthy blood donors who donated during the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong, non-pneumonic hospital inpatients, and symptom-free health-care workers. All positive samples were confirmed by two separate western-blot assays (with recombinant nucleocapsid protein and recombinant spike polypeptide).

Findings: Western-blot analysis showed that the nucleocapsid protein and spike polypeptide of SARS-CoV are highly immunogenic. The specificity of the IgG antibody test (ELISA with positive samples confirmed by the two western-blot assays) was 100%, and the sensitivity was 94.3%. Three of 400 healthy blood donors who donated during the SARS outbreak and one of 131 non-pneumonic paediatric inpatients were positive for IgG antibodies, confirmed by the two western-blot assays (total, 0.48% of our study population).

Interpretation: Our findings support the existence of subclinical or non-pneumonic SARS-CoV infections. Such infections are more common than SARS-CoV pneumonia in our locality.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7112439PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(04)15729-2DOI Listing

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