AI Article Synopsis

  • The traditional methods for measuring virus titres take a long time, usually requiring 24-72 hours post-infection for plaques to form.
  • A new method using capillary cytometry allows for faster detection of infected cells within just an hour, correlating well with traditional methods for low to moderate levels of infections.
  • This rapid and automated technique, capable of processing thousands of cells in seconds, could streamline viral research and antiviral drug screening.

Article Abstract

The traditional plaque forming and TCID(50) methods to determine replication competent virus titres rely on several cycles of replication and infection to generate a plaque with an incubation period of 24-72 h post-infection typically required. We developed a method to quantify infective viral particles based on early detection of cellular events by capillary cytometry. The method uses a capillary cytometer as a precise cell counter that can discriminate infected from non-infected cells. The general protocol was developed using a Guava PCA, genetically modified HSV-1 virus and polyclonal antibodies against antigens expressed on the cell membrane. Infection was detected after 1 h incubation and a plateau in the number of infected cells was observed between 7 and 9 h. A good correlation between titres obtained by the plaque forming method and the proposed method was observed for a ratio of infected to total cells between 0.5 and 0.05. The rapid and automated analysis (10 s/1000 events acquired per sample) makes the method particularly useful for high-throughput applications. The proposed method can be extended easily to determine the titre of other viruses providing a powerful tool for virology and antiviral screening.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jviromet.2006.06.013DOI Listing

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