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Spring scrub typhus has frequently occurred in Pingtan Island, China, since 2000. In this study, we amplified a 1352-bp DNA fragment encoding a truncated 56-kDa outer membrane protein of the Ptan strain, which was isolated from a serum sample of a patient with spring scrub typhus, and cloned it into the pET28a vector for expression. The expression product was a recombinant polypeptide containing a His-tag to facilitate purification on a Ni2+ chromatography column. The recombinant protein was further identified by Western blotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and appeared to be a good diagnostic antigen candidate. A rapid colloidal gold immunochromatographic assay (CIA) for detecting serum total antibodies, IgG and IgM, which are anti-Orientia tsutsugamushi, was developed, using a mixture of the r56 of the Gilliam and Ptan strains as the diagnostic antigen. CIA performance was tested on a panel of 112 control sera from confirmed cases of scrub typhus. The detection sensitivities of CIA against anti-O. tsutsugamushi total antibodies, IgM, and IgG were 98.2%, 81.2%, and 94.6%, respectively, while that of IFA (using the lysate of the O. tsutsugamushi Gilliam-infected chicken yolk sac as the antigen) against IgG was 85.7%. One hundred five serum samples from healthy individuals and patients with other febrile diseases were tested with CIA as negative controls. Specificities of CIA against anti-O. tsutsugamushi total antibodies, IgM, and IgG were 98.1%, 100%, and 98.9%, respectively, while the specificity of IFA against IgG was 98.9%. These results indicated that CIA was a good assay and could substitute for conventional immunofluorescence assays for diagnosis of scrub typhus.
Received December 31, 2005. Accepted for publication October 27, 2006.
Acknowledgment: We thank Dr. Qiajia Huang, Fuzhou General Hospital of Nanjing Command stationed in Fuzhou, Fujian province, China for critically reading the manuscript and helpful corrections in grammar and writing.
Financial support: This study was supported by the Bureau of Hygiene, Nanjing Command, PLA.
* Address correspondence to Jiaqi Tang, 293 East Zhongshan Road, Nanjing, China 210002. E-mail: tjiaqi2006{at}yahoo.com.cn
Authors addresses: Min Cao, Hengbin Guo, Changjun Wang, Xianfu Li, Xiuzhen Pan, Zhu Jin, and Jiaqi Tang, Department of Epidemiology and Microbiology, Research Institute for Medicine of Nanjing Command, Jiangsu, China, Telephone: +86-25-84526002, Fax: +86-25-84507094, E-mail: tjiaqi2006{at}yahoo.com.cn. Tang Tang, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, E-mail: olivertt{at}gmail.com.
Min Cao, Hengbin Guo, Tang Tang, and Jiaqi Tang contributed equally to the work.
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