Affiliation:
1. Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO
2. McDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Rapid, reliable, and widespread testing is required to curtail the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Current gold-standard nucleic acid tests are hampered by supply shortages in critical reagents including nasal swabs, RNA extraction kits, personal protective equipment, instrumentation, and labor.
Methods
To overcome these challenges, we developed a rapid colorimetric assay using reverse-transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) optimized on human saliva samples without an RNA purification step. We describe the optimization of saliva pretreatment protocols to enable analytically sensitive viral detection by RT-LAMP. We optimized the RT-LAMP reaction conditions and implemented high-throughput unbiased methods for assay interpretation. We tested whether saliva pretreatment could also enable viral detection by conventional reverse-transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). Finally, we validated these assays on clinical samples.
Results
The optimized saliva pretreatment protocol enabled analytically sensitive extraction-free detection of SARS-CoV-2 from saliva by colorimetric RT-LAMP or RT-qPCR. In simulated samples, the optimized RT-LAMP assay had a limit of detection of 59 (95% confidence interval: 44–104) particle copies per reaction. We highlighted the flexibility of LAMP assay implementation using 3 readouts: naked-eye colorimetry, spectrophotometry, and real-time fluorescence. In a set of 30 clinical saliva samples, colorimetric RT-LAMP and RT-qPCR assays performed directly on pretreated saliva samples without RNA extraction had accuracies greater than 90%.
Conclusions
Rapid and extraction-free detection of SARS-CoV-2 from saliva by colorimetric RT-LAMP is a simple, sensitive, and cost-effective approach with broad potential to expand diagnostic testing for the virus causing COVID-19.
Funder
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and obtained through BEI Resources
NIAID, NIH
SARS-Related Coronavirus 2
Isolate USA-WA1/2020
Heat Inactivated
WUSM COVID Research fund
Department of Genetics and the McDonnell Genome Institute
NIH
Washington University School of Medicine
Barnes-Jewish Hospital
Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences
Tissue Procurement Core provided saliva samples
The Siteman Cancer Center is supported in part by an NCI Cancer Center Support
NCATS Clinical and Translational Science Award
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry
Cited by
176 articles.
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