Virus counter
The virus counter is an instrument for rapid quantification of viruses in liquid samples. It is a specialized flow cytometer that uses high-sensitivity fluorescence detection to give a direct measurement of the concentration of virus particles in a fraction of the time required for traditional plaque assays.
Early development
[edit]The virus counter was developed in 2001 at University of Colorado Boulder.[1] The Single Nanometric Particle Enumerator (SNaPE) instrument was based on the principle of fluorescence detection from single stained nucleic acids aggregates by evaluating respiratory viruses.[2] Quantification results from the instrument correlated with expected virus concentration and the values would be significantly higher than those obtained by standard plaque titer methods[3] typically used for virus quantification. The measured concentrations were similar in magnitude to quantitative PCR results, both being substantially higher than plaque titer values.
In 2004 the virus counter's added a second detection channel to the SNaPE instrument which improved data analysis substantially to increase specificity.[4] The principle of detection was based on staining proteins and nucleic acids with fluorescent dyes within a liquid sample. As stained particles passed through the probe region and interacted with a laser, emissions were detected and recorded for analysis. This dual channel system established the concept of measuring intact virions through detection of co-localized protein and nucleic acids.[5] Results from baculovirus analyzed with this dual-channel virus counter system were lower in magnitude than the SNaPE results, being more similar in magnitude and correlated with infectious assay results.[6]
Commercialization
[edit]A commercial version of the virus counter was developed by InDevR. In 2012 InDevR spun off the virus counter instrument to ViroCyt LCC. The press release from January 15, 2013, stated, "ViroCyt will be responsible for expanding the commercial market for the virus counter technology developed by InDevR."[7] Sartorius Stedim Biotech acquired ViroCyt for $16 million in 2016.[8] The Virus Analytics department of Sartorius Stedium developed the next generation Virus Counter which is commercially available.
Applications
[edit]The instrument is representative of the next generation of “personal” flow cytometers designed exclusively for total virus particle quantification. Similar to virus concentration determined by transmission electron microscopy, the virus counter provides a measurement of the total number of virus particles/mL. The virus counter has been successfully demonstrated to readily quantify a diverse range of viruses including but not limited to: influenza, dengue, baculovirus, respiratory syncytial, parainfluenza, rubella, cytomegalovirus, and herpes simplex virus.
The ability to rapidly quantify viruses has high impact in:
- Vaccine research, development, and manufacturing
- Antiviral research
- Viral vector research and protein expression
- Bioprocess optimization
- Viral antigen characterization
- Viral diagnostic standard characterization
- Viral-based gene therapy research
Reagents
[edit]Sartorius Stedium has developed several reagents for the Virus Counter since acquiring it in 2016. These reagents include Combodye, a duel stained reagent for enveloped viruses and Virotag, specific fluorescently labeled, high-affinity reagents.[9]
References
[edit]- ^ Ferris, M. M.; Maurer, T. T.; Rowlen, K. L. (2006). "Detection and Enumeration of Single Nanometric Particles: A Confocal Optical Design for Fluorescence Flow Cytometry". Review of Scientific Instruments. 73 (6): 2404–2410. doi:10.1063/1.1476714.
- ^ Ferris, M. M.; McCabe, M. O.; Doan, L. G.; Rowlen, K. L. (2002). "Rapid Enumeration of Respiratory Viruses". Analytical Chemistry. 74 (8): 2863–2871. doi:10.1021/ac011183q. PMID 11985317.
- ^ Ferris, M. M.; Stoffel, C. L.; Maurer, T. T.; Rowlen, K. L. (2002). "Quantitative Intercomparison of Transmission Electron Microscopy, Flow Cytometry and Epifluorescence Microscopy for Nanometric Particle Analysiss". Analytical Biochemistry. 304 (2): 249–256. doi:10.1006/abio.2002.5616. PMID 12009703.
- ^ Stoffel, C.L.; Rowlen, K. L.; Rowlen, KL (2005). "Design and Characterization of a Compact Dual Channel Virus Counter". Cytometry. 65 (A): 140–147. doi:10.1002/cyto.a.20145. PMID 15830378.
- ^ Stoffel, C.L.; Rowlen, K. L. (2005). "Data Analysis for a Dual-Channel Virus Counter". Analytical Chemistry. 77 (7): 2243–2246. doi:10.1021/ac048626l. PMID 15801759.
- ^ Stoffel, C.L.; Finch, R.; Christensen, K.; Edwards, D.; Rowlen, K. L. (2005). "Dual-Channel Virus Counter". American Biotechnology Laboratory. 37 (22): 24–25.
- ^ Rinaldi, Laura. "404 Page". InDevR. Retrieved 2020-10-02.
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: Cite uses generic title (help) - ^ "Sartorius Acquires ViroCyt for $16M". GEN - Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News. 2016-07-15. Retrieved 2020-10-02.
- ^ "Combo Dye® and ViroTag® Reagents". Sartorius. Retrieved 2020-10-03.