| Literature DB >> 25136338 |
Yogesh Chander1, Jim Koelbl1, Jamie Puckett1, Michael J Moser1, Audrey J Klingele1, Mark R Liles2, Abel Carrias2, David A Mead1, Thomas W Schoenfeld1.
Abstract
Meeting the goal of providing point of care (POC) tests for molecular detection of pathogens in low resource settings places stringent demands on all aspects of the technology. OmniAmp DNA polymerase (Pol) is a thermostable viral enzyme that enables true POC use in clinics or in the field by overcoming important barriers to isothermal amplification. In this paper, we describe the multiple advantages of OmniAmp Pol as an isothermal amplification enzyme and provide examples of its use in loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) for pathogen detection. The inherent reverse transcriptase activity of OmniAmp Pol allows single enzyme detection of RNA targets in RT-LAMP. Common methods of nucleic acid amplification are highly susceptible to sample contaminants, necessitating elaborate nucleic acid purification protocols that are incompatible with POC or field use. OmniAmp Pol was found to be less inhibited by whole blood components typical in certain crude sample preparations. Moreover, the thermostability of the enzyme compared to alternative DNA polymerases (Bst) and reverse transcriptases allows pretreatment of complete reaction mixes immediately prior to amplification, which facilitates amplification of highly structured genome regions. Compared to Bst, OmniAmp Pol has a faster time to result, particularly with more dilute templates. Molecular diagnostics in field settings can be challenging due to the lack of refrigeration. The stability of OmniAmp Pol is compatible with a dry format that enables long term storage at ambient temperatures. A final requirement for field operability is compatibility with either commonly available instruments or, in other cases, a simple, inexpensive, portable detection mode requiring minimal training or power. Detection of amplification products is shown using lateral flow strips and analysis on a real-time PCR instrument. Results of this study show that OmniAmp Pol is ideally suited for low resource molecular detection of pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: RNA/DNA polymerase; RT-LAMP; diagnostics; infectious diseases; point-of-care
Year: 2014 PMID: 25136338 PMCID: PMC4117986 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
List of targets for which LAMP assays were developed using OmniAmp polymerase.
| MS2 phage (MS-2) | RNA | Replicase protein (MS2g4) | 70 | ATCC |
| Swine influenza virus (SIV) H1N1 | RNA | Matrix (M) | 72 | University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN |
| Porcine circovirus-2 (PCV-2) | DNA | Capsid protein (ORF 2) | 70 | |
| West Nile virus (WNV)—NY 2001-6263 | RNA | Envelope glycoprotein | 72 | ZeptoMetrix, Buffalo, NY |
| DNA | Repetitive element | 70 | Auburn University, AL | |
| DNA | ATP synthase, β-subunit | 68 | Steris Corporation, OH | |
| DNA | Carbamate kinase ( | 68 | ZeptoMetrix, Buffalo, NY | |
| RNA | Glycoprotein (GP) | 72 | Galveston National Lab, TX (RNA only) | |
| RNA | Nucleoprotein (S) | 68 | ||
| Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV)—type I | RNA | 5′-UTR | 70 | Wisconsin Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, Madison, WI |
RNA extracts were provided by Galveston National Laboratory, TX and were certified for use in BSL II facility.
List of LAMP primers used in this report.
| MS2 phage (MS-2) | F3 | TGTCATGGGATCCGGATGTT | This study |
| B3 | CAATAGAGCCGCTCTCAGAG | ||
| FL | CCAGAGAGGAGGTTGCCAA | ||
| BL | TGCAGGATGCAGCGCCTTA | ||
| FIP | GCCCAAACAACGACGATCGGTAAAACCAGCATCCGTAGCCT | ||
| BIP | GCACGTTCTCCAACGGTGCTGGTTGCTTGTTCAGCGAACT | ||
| Swine influenza virus (SIV) H1N1 | F3 | ATCATCCCGTCAGGCCCCCTCA | This study |
| B3 | TACGCTGCAGTCCTCGCTCACTGG | ||
| FL | TGTCTTTGCAGGAAAGAAC | ||
| BL | TCTGACTAAGGGAATTTTAGGAT | ||
| FIP | CCATGAGAGCCTCAAGATCAAGCCGAGATCGCACAGA | ||
| BIP | GACAAGACCAATCCTGTCACCACGGTGAGCGTGAACACAA | ||
| Porcine circovirus-2 (PCV-2) | F3 | CACTTCGTAATGGTTTTTATTATTTA | Zhao et al., |
| B3 | TCCACTATTGATTACTTCCAAC | ||
| FL | AACCATGTATGTACAATTCAGAGAATTTAATC | ||
| BL | TTCCAGCAGTTTGTAGTCTCAGC | ||
| FIP | CAGGAATACAATATCCGTGTAACCATTTTGGTTAAGTGGGGGGTCTT | ||
| BIP | GAGGCCTACGTGGTCTACATTTTTCAAACAACAAAAGAAATCAGCTATG | ||
| West Nile virus (WNV)—NY 2001-6263 | F3 | TGGATTTGGTTCTCGAAGG | This study |
| B3 | GGTCAGCACGTTTGTCATT | ||
| FL | CATCGATGGTAGGCTTGTC | ||
| BL | TCTCCACCAAAGCTGCGT | ||
| FIP | TTGGCCGCCTCCATATTCATCATTTTCAGCTGCGTGACTATCATGT | ||
| BIP | TGCTATTTGGCTACCGTCAGCGTTTTTGAGCTTCTCCCATGGTCG | ||
| F3 | CGGCGAAAATCATACCCCT | This study | |
| B3 | ACCCGACAGACAGAGGAAAG | ||
| FL | GGCAAGAGAGGACGACCACGATA | ||
| BL | CAGAGACAAGCACGGCGAGTG | ||
| FIP | ATTGTTGGATGCCCTCCCGGGTCTGCGTGTAGCTTGTCA | ||
| BIP | TCGAGTCATGGCGATTGGCTCCGACACATAGTGGTGGAACG | ||
| F3 | GTCGCCTAAATGAAGTGC | This study | |
| B3 | GGATAGCGATGAAGAAAGGAC | ||
| FL | AGGTGAAAATGAAGTAGG | ||
| BL | AAAACGTACGTCAACGA | ||
| FIP | CGATTAAAGTTTCACAACCAGCAACGACCTCTAGCGTTAAATCGA | ||
| BIP | ATTTCAGGTAAGTGACCGTCTTCCGTTAGCCAAGTAATGGGAC | ||
| F3 | TCGAACAGTGACACAACG | This study | |
| B3 | TCTTCTTTCGTATAAAAAGGACC | ||
| FL | CCTATCATACCCTGTGACATT | ||
| BL | ACACGTGTGGAAGTAGATAA | ||
| FIP | GCGATTGATTTCAGTTTCCAACCCATTGGATACTTGTGGTGC | ||
| BIP | AGTGATAGAACTGTAGGCACAATCGTTATCAAATCGTGGATCATCT | ||
| Ebola virus—Zaire | F3 | ATGGGCTGAAAACTGCTACA | This study |
| B3 | CAGCGAAAGTCGTTCCTCG | ||
| FL | GTCTGGCGCTGCTGGTAGAC | ||
| BL | CCTTCCACAAAGAGGGTG | ||
| FIP | TTGTGCACATACCGGCACCGAAAAAACCTGACGGGAGTGA | ||
| BIP | GACCGTGTGCCGGAGACTTTGTGGAAGCAAGTCGATCAT | ||
| Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) | F3 | AGGTGGTTTGAAGAGTTCA | This study |
| B3 | ACAAAACTTTGTTGCCTCC | ||
| FL | ATAGGAGTTTGTGAAGGTGT | ||
| BL | CCGATGATGCACAGAAGG | ||
| FIP | TGGGAACACTCTCGCAAAAGGAAAAAGGAAATGGACTTGTGG | ||
| BIP | TGTGTTTCAGATGGCCAGTGCCGAGCAGATGCGTAGATGGAG | ||
| Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV)—type I | F3 | GCGAAGGCCGAAIAGAGG | Koelbl et al., in preparation |
| B3 | TITGGGCITGCCCTCG | ||
| BL | CAGGGTAGTCGTCAGTGGTTC | ||
| FIP | CICCACTGITGCTACCCICCTAICCATGCCCTTAGTAGG | ||
| BIP | CGTTGGATGGCTIAAGCCCTGAGTCCACITGGCATCTCG |
Figure 1Performance as measured by time to result of OmniAmp and .
Figure 2Performance of . Bst and OmniAmp LAMP were performed at their optimal temperatures, 65 and 70°C, respectively. (No amplification is indicated by “.
Figure 3Detection of DNA targets: For each pathogen, 10-fold serial dilutions of extracted DNA were prepared in water and used as template in LAMP reaction. Amplification was performed on a real time thermocycler in triplicate with average TTRs shown for each dilution. (No amplification is indicated by “. (B) PCV-2 LAMP products were separated on 2% agarose gel.
Figure 4Sensitivity of Porcine circovirus-2 (PCV-2) LAMP. 10-fold serial dilutions of extracted DNA were prepared in water and used as template in LAMP reaction. Amplification was performed on a real time thermocycler in triplicate with average TTRs shown for each dilution.
Figure 5RT-LAMP using OmniAmp polymerase for detection of RNA targets: West Nile virus (WNV), Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic virus (CCHF), Ebola virus (EBoV), Swine influenza virus (SIV), MS2, and Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV). (A) For each pathogen, 10-fold serial dilutions of extracted RNA were prepared in water and used as template in LAMP reaction. Results are averages of three TTR values for each dilution. (No amplification is indicated by “. (B) MS2 LAMP products were separated on 2% agarose gel.
Figure 6Effect of pre-incubation step on performance of RT-LAMP for detection of Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV)—type 1. RNA extracted from three clinical samples (ear notch) were tested in LAMP with pre-heat step (3 s at 92°C) and without pre-heat step before isothermal incubation at 70°C for 30 min. (No amplification is indicated by “.
Figure 7Feasibility of rapid heat lysis method for extraction of viral (MS2) nucleic acid from blood samples. Viral RNA from spiked samples was extracted by two methods: rapid heat lysis (Lucigen) and using a commercial RNA extraction kit (QIAamp, Qiagen). (No amplification is indicated by “.
Figure 8Comparison of MS2 RT-LAMP with wet and dried reagents. (A) Ten-fold serial dilutions of MS2 phage particles was made in water and used directly as template in reaction mixture. Amplification was performed on a real time thermocycler in duplicate and time to results was recorded. (B) LAMP reaction products were separated on 2% agarose gel.
Figure 9(A) Beads of dried LAMP reagents in PCR tubes. (B) Feasibility data showing stability based on TTR of LAMP reagents in dried format stored at the indicated temperatures compared to wet enzyme stored at −20° over 180 days.
Figure 10Detection of . Sensitivity was determined by testing 100-fold dilutions of E. ictaluri S97-9773 (strain 1) and E. ictaluri 219 (strain 2) in LAMP (upper panel). Dilutions over the same range of E. coli and E. tarda were tested using for the same reactions to confirm specificity (lower panel). Positive reaction is indicated by the appearance of two red lines, one at “Control” and other at “Test.” Negative reaction is indicated by appearance of only one red line at “Control.”