Differentiation between wild and vaccine-derived strains of poliovirus by stringent microplate hybridization of PCR products.

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RESUMO

Procedures for differentiation between wild and vaccine-derived strains of poliovirus are required, particularly in countries where wild and vaccine-related strains coexist. For this differentiation, we tested the method of Inouye and Hondo (S. Inouye and R. Hondo, Arch. Virol. 129:311-316, 1993) for discrimination of closely related viruses by using stringent microplate hybridization of PCR products. We used a pair of primers with enterovirus common sequences (between these primers there is a variable region for capsid proteins) for PCR using templates from wild and vaccine-derived poliovirus strains which were isolated in tissue culture and serotyped by neutralization assay. We also used the same primers for preparation of probes, which were labelled by incorporation of biotin-dUTP in the PCR, with the three original Sabin vaccine virus strains used as templates. The amplified DNAs from the isolates were immobilized on microplate wells and were then hybridized with the labelled probes. We found that, under the usual hybridization conditions, the Sabin vaccine virus strain probes hybridized with both wild and vaccine-derived viruses, but under stringent conditions, they reacted only with vaccine-derived viruses of the same serotype, clearly differentiating these from wild-type viruses.

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