| Literature DB >> 33536572 |
Matthew L Robinson1, Jonathan Gunn2, Daniel Monaco2, Joel J Credle2, Brandon Sie2, Alexandra Tchir2, Justin Hardick1,3, Xuwen Zheng2, Kathryn Shaw-Saliba3, Richard E Rothman1,3, Susan H Eshleman4, Andrew Pekosz5, Kasper Hansen6, Heba Mostafa7, Martin Steinegger8, H Benjamin Larman9.
Abstract
There is an urgent and unprecedented need for sensitive and high-throughput molecular diagnostic tests to combat the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Here we present a generalized version of the RNA-mediated oligonucleotide Annealing Selection and Ligation with next generation DNA sequencing (RASL-seq) assay, called "capture RASL-seq" (cRASL-seq), which enables highly sensitive (down to ~1-100 pfu/ml or cfu/ml) and highly multiplexed (up to ~10,000 target sequences) detection of pathogens. Importantly, cRASL-seq analysis of COVID-19 patient nasopharyngeal (NP) swab specimens does not involve nucleic acid purification or reverse transcription, steps that have introduced supply bottlenecks into standard assay workflows. Our simplified protocol additionally enables the direct and efficient genotyping of selected, informative SARS-CoV-2 polymorphisms across the entire genome, which can be used for enhanced characterization of transmission chains at population scale and detection of viral clades with higher or lower virulence. Given its extremely low per-sample cost, simple and automatable protocol and analytics, probe panel modularity, and massive scalability, we propose that cRASL-seq testing is a powerful new technology with the potential to help mitigate the current pandemic and prevent similar public health crises.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33536572 PMCID: PMC7856856 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-020-00730-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842