Author/Authors :
Patrick CY Woo، نويسنده , , Susanna KP Lau، نويسنده , , Hoi-wah Tsoi، نويسنده , , Kwok-hung Chan، نويسنده , , Beatrice HL Wong، نويسنده , , Xiao-yan Che، نويسنده , , Victoria KP Tam، نويسنده , , Sidney C.F Tam، نويسنده , , Vincent CC Cheng، نويسنده , , Ivan FN Hung، نويسنده , , Samson SY Wong، نويسنده , , Bo-jian Zheng، نويسنده , , Yi Guan، نويسنده , , Kwok-yung Yuen، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background
Although the genome of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) has been sequenced and a possible animal reservoir identified, seroprevalence studies and mass screening for detection of subclinical and non-pneumonic infections are still lacking.
Methods
We cloned and purified the nucleocapsid protein and spike polypeptide of SARS-CoV and examined their immunogenicity with serum from patients with SARS-CoV pneumonia. An ELISA based on recombinant nucleocapsid protein for IgG detection was tested with serum from 149 healthy blood donors who donated 3 years previously and with serum positive for antibodies against SARS-CoV (by indirect immunofluorescence assay) from 106 patients with SARS-CoV pneumonia. The seroprevalence of SARS-CoV was studied with the ELISA in healthy blood donors who donated during the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong, non-pneumonic hospital inpatients, and symptom-free health-care workers. All positive samples were confirmed by two separate western-blot assays (with recombinant nucleocapsid protein and recombinant spike polypeptide).
Findings
Western-blot analysis showed that the nucleocapsid protein and spike polypeptide of SARS-CoV are highly immunogenic. The specificity of the IgG antibody test (ELISA with positive samples confirmed by the two western-blot assays) was 100%, and the sensitivity was 94•3%. Three of 400 healthy blood donors who donated during the SARS outbreak and one of 131 non-pneumonic paediatric inpatients were positive for IgG antibodies, confirmed by the two western-blot assays (total, 0•48% of our study population).
Interpretation
Our findings support the existence of subclinical or non-pneumonic SARS-CoV infections. Such infections are more common than SARS-CoV pneumonia in our locality.