AI Article Synopsis

  • In April 2009, a surge of influenza-like illnesses linked to a novel A (H1N1) virus was detected in Mexico City, prompting research into its detection in archived lung samples.
  • Eight paraffin-embedded lung samples from patients who died of pneumonia were tested, revealing a 100% detection of A (H1N1) virus sequences in previously diagnosed cases using in situ RT-PCR.
  • The study successfully demonstrated that specific viral RNA can be amplified from stored clinical samples, offering a sensitive detection method that could be beneficial when clinical samples are scarce or of poor quality.

Article Abstract

Background: In April 2009, public health surveillance detected an increased number of influenza-like illnesses in Mexico City's hospitals. The etiological agent was subsequently determined to be a spread of a worldwide novel influenza A (H1N1) triple reassortant. The purpose of the present study was to demonstrate that molecular detection of pandemic influenza A (H1N1) 2009 strains is possible in archival material such as paraffin-embedded lung samples.

Methods: In order to detect A (H1N1) virus sequences in archived biological samples, eight paraffin-embedded lung samples from patients who died of pneumonia and respiratory failure were tested for influenza A (H1N1) Neuraminidase (NA) RNA using in situ RT-PCR.

Results: We detected NA transcripts in 100% of the previously diagnosed A (H1N1)-positive samples as a cytoplasmic signal. No expression was detected by in situ RT-PCR in two Influenza-like Illness A (H1N1)-negative patients using standard protocols nor in a non-related cervical cell line. In situ relative transcription levels correlated with those obtained when in vitro RT-PCR assays were performed. Partial sequences of the NA gene from A (H1N1)-positive patients were obtained by the in situ RT-PCR-sequencing method. Sequence analysis showed 98% similarity with influenza viruses reported previously in other places.

Conclusions: We have successfully amplified specific influenza A (H1N1) NA sequences using stored clinical material; results suggest that this strategy could be useful when clinical RNA samples are quantity limited, or when poor quality is obtained. Here, we provide a very sensitive method that specifically detects the neuraminidase viral RNA in lung samples from patients who died from pneumonia caused by Influenza A (H1N1) outbreak in Mexico City.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3552683PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-13-20DOI Listing

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