Development of Tiling amplicon PCR for Ross River virus (RRV)
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Date
2025
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Publisher
Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
The Ross River virus (RRV), an Australian alphavirus that causes epidemic polyarthritis,
remains a priority for genomic surveillance due to its sporadic outbreaks and varying
strains. Comprehensive genome amplification is necessary for monitoring its molecular
evolution; however, successful multiplex PCR design requires consideration of primer
quality metrics that need extensive computational analysis. We obtained publicly available
RRV genomes from NCBI, aligned them using the QML1 strain (GenBank GQ433354.1)
as a reference, and utilized Ubuntu-based Olivar v1.3.0 to design automated tiling
amplicon primers. We looked at two tiling strategies: 50-bp and 100-bp stepwise intervals.
These were amplicon sizes ranging from 300 to 600 bp. The ideal balance between
coverage, efficacy, and primer quality was selected as the best 400-500 bp scheme. Primer
candidates were in-silico checked using Geneious, MEGA, and SnapGene to identify
which primers were specific, had a suitable GC content, and tolerated mismatches in
multiple isolates of RRV. Simple adjustments to the positions and degeneracy were made
to address off-target sites, three industrial mismatches, and heterodimer threats through
manual curation. The predicted dimerization risk and stable thermodynamic profiles were
obtained by spacing the primers evenly. The problems were corrected by redesigning and
repositioning problematic primers, which demonstrated multi-site binding or primer
primer complementarity. Mismatches at 3 ends of a short RNA strand were repaired with
minimal IUPAC substitutions. The presence of amplicon overlaps (nominal 70 bp, insert
level 24 bp) maintained the integrity of the data without adding any additional copies. In
contrast, regions with extremely high GC content were automatically omitted to prevent
amplification issues. Of the 22,374 annotated features of the primer, the residual off-target
binding was 0.05%, indicating that the assay was overall highly specific. The 100-bp
interval design is effective in recovering the complete genome of a wide variety of
isolates, thereby providing a strong foundation for neutralizing genomic surveillance and
lineage tracing efforts, as well as outbreak response efforts. Despite optimizing primers,
residual mismatches and off-target products persist. Nevertheless, the methodological
framework can be easily modified for other alphaviruses that necessitate comprehensive
and strain-inclusive primer coverage.
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Keywords
Ross River Virus, alphavirus, tailing amplicon, primer, PCR, Western Australia
