Search results for "intercalating dye"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Viability RT-qPCR to Distinguish Between HEV and HAV With Intact and Altered Capsids

2018

The hepatitis E virus (HEV) is an emerging pathogen showing a considerable increase in the number of reported cases in Europe mainly related to the ingestion of contaminated food. As with other relevant viral foodborne pathogens, real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) is the gold standard for HEV detection in clinical, food, and environmental samples, but these procedures cannot discriminate between inactivated and potentially infectious viruses. Thus, the aim of this study was to develop a viability PCR method to discriminate between native, heat-, and high-pressure processing (HPP)-treated HEV using the hepatitis A virus (HAV) as a cultivable surrogate. To thi…

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)viruses030106 microbiologylcsh:QR1-502viability RT-qPCRBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologylcsh:Microbiologylaw.invention03 medical and health sciencesHepatitis E viruslawmedicineIngestionPolymerase chain reactionOriginal ResearchInfectivitybusiness.industryfoodborne virusGold standard (test)Food safetyVirologyReverse transcriptaseHAVfood safety030104 developmental biologyCapsidHEVbusinessintercalating dyeFrontiers in Microbiology
researchProduct

Optimization of PMAxx pretreatment to distinguish between human norovirus with intact and altered capsids in shellfish and sewage samples

2018

Shellfish contamination by human noroviruses (HuNoVs) is a serious health and economic problem. Recently an ISO procedure based on RT-qPCR for the quantitative detection of HuNoVs in shellfish has been issued, but these procedures cannot discriminate between inactivated and potentially infectious viruses. The aim of the present study was to optimize a pretreatment using PMAxx to better discriminate between intact and heat-treated HuNoVs in shellfish and sewage. To this end, the optimal conditions (30 min incubation with 100 μM of PMAxx and 0.5% of Triton, and double photoactivation) were applied to mussels, oysters and cockles artificially inoculated with thermally-inactivated (99 °C for 5 …

0301 basic medicineOyster030106 microbiologyIntercalating dyesSewageGenome ViralReal-Time Polymerase Chain Reactionmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesCapsidbiology.animalmedicineAnimalsHumansColoring AgentsShellfishShellfish2. Zero hungerInfectivityComplex matrixbiologyViability PCRSewagebusiness.industryNorovirusRT-qPCRGeneral MedicineContamination6. Clean water3. Good health030104 developmental biologyCapsidNorovirusbusinessFood Science
researchProduct