| Literature DB >> 30790518 |
M Verosloff1,2, J Chappell3, K L Perry4, J R Thompson4, J B Lucks1,5,2.
Abstract
Synthetic biology based diagnostic technologies have improved upon gold standard diagnostic methodologies by decreasing cost, increasing accuracy, and enhancing portability. However, there has been little effort in adapting these technologies toward applications related to point-of-use monitoring of plant and crop health. Here, we take a step toward this vision by developing an approach that couples isothermal amplification of specific plant pathogen genomic sequences with customizable synthetic RNA regulators that are designed to trigger the production of a colorimetric output in cell-free gene expression reactions. We demonstrate our system can sense viral derived sequences with high sensitivity and specificity, and can be utilized to directly detect viruses from infected plant material. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the entire system can operate using only body heat and naked-eye visual analysis of outputs. We anticipate these strategies to be important components of user-friendly and deployable diagnostic systems that can be configured to detect a range of important plant pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: RNA synthetic biology; cell free synthetic biology; crop pathogens; isothermal amplification; plant viruses; point-of-use diagnostics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30790518 PMCID: PMC6479721 DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.8b00526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Synth Biol ISSN: 2161-5063 Impact factor: 5.110
Figure 1Basic operation of PLANT-Dx. (a) Schematic overview. Viral RNA is amplified by recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) into DNA templates that contain a T7 polymerase promoter (purple), a portion of a small transcription activating RNA (STAR) sequence (blue), and a portion of the viral RNA sequence (red). Cell-free expression of these templates produces viral sequence-derived STAR which triggers the production of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (CDO), which in turn converts catechol into hydroxymuconic semialdehyde, a yellow colored compound that is visible by the eye near a 385 nm absorbance value of 0.8 (dashed line, Figure S3, S4). (b) Demonstrated ability to detect cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) sequences from in vitro transcription (IVT) RNA products (orange) versus control (gray) samples, by 120 min across three different days. (c) Demonstrated ability to detect potato virus Y (PVY) based IVT RNA (orange) versus control (gray) samples by 120 min across three different days. (d) An orthogonality matrix of cell-free reactions challenging RPA products from different IVT sources against different STAR-Target-CDO constructs showing positive results (yellow) only for cognate combinations at 150 min. (e) Serial dilution of CMV IVT RNA was used to determine a limit of detection in between 44 pM and 4.4 pM after 150 min of reaction. (−) Template indicates a control in which no CMV IVT RNA was input into the RPA reaction. p-value comparison was made using a Student’s t test between the data from the 44 pM and (−) Template conditions. Data in (b), (c) represent mean values and error bars represent s.d. of n = 3 technical replicates. Data in (e) represent mean values (bars) of n = 3 biological replicates, each with n = 3 technical replicates (n = 9 total), plotted as individual points.
Figure 2Implementing a PLANT-Dx diagnostic. (a) PLANT-Dx reactions were used to detect CMV from infected N. tabacum derived lysate (orange) versus uninfected plant-derived lysate (gray), across three different days. Data displayed as in Figure b,c. (b) Time lapse photos of cell-free reactions containing RPA products from CMV infected lysate (+) or uninfected lysate (−). (c) Demonstration that PLANT-Dx can operate using only body heat as a heat source. RPA and cell-free reactions were run by taping tubes on the inner arm for 40 and 150 min, respectively. A yellow color was observed for the CMV-infected lysate sample (+) and not the uninfected lysate control (−). Data in (a) represent mean values, and error bars represent s.d. of n = 3 technical replicates.