| Literature DB >> 34910739 |
Justin S Lee1, Jason M Goldstein1, Jonathan L Moon1, Owen Herzegh1, Dennis A Bagarozzi1, M Steven Oberste2, Heather Hughes1, Kanwar Bedi1, Dorothie Gerard1, Brenique Cameron1, Christopher Benton1, Asiya Chida1, Ausaf Ahmad1, David J Petway1, Xiaoling Tang1, Nicky Sulaiman1, Dawit Teklu1, Dhwani Batra1, Dakota Howard1, Mili Sheth1, Wendi Kuhnert3, Stephanie R Bialek2, Christina L Hutson4, Jan Pohl1, Darin S Carroll1.
Abstract
At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) designed, manufactured, and distributed the CDC 2019-Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) Real-Time RT-PCR Diagnostic Panel for SARS-CoV-2 detection. The diagnostic panel targeted three viral nucleocapsid gene loci (N1, N2, and N3 primers and probes) to maximize sensitivity and to provide redundancy for virus detection if mutations occurred. After the first distribution of the diagnostic panel, state public health laboratories reported fluorescent signal in the absence of viral template (false-positive reactivity) for the N3 component and to a lesser extent for N1. This report describes the findings of an internal investigation conducted by the CDC to identify the cause(s) of the N1 and N3 false-positive reactivity. For N1, results demonstrate that contamination with a synthetic template, that occurred while the "bulk" manufactured materials were located in a research lab for quality assessment, was the cause of false reactivity in the first lot. Base pairing between the 3' end of the N3 probe and the 3' end of the N3 reverse primer led to amplification of duplex and larger molecules resulting in false reactivity in the N3 assay component. We conclude that flaws in both assay design and handling of the "bulk" material, caused the problems with the first lot of the 2019-nCoV Real-Time RT-PCR Diagnostic Panel. In addition, within this study, we found that the age of the examined diagnostic panel reagents increases the frequency of false positive results for N3. We discuss these findings in the context of improvements to quality control, quality assurance, and assay validation practices that have since been improved at the CDC.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34910739 PMCID: PMC8673615 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of RT-PCR and sequencing results from no-template control reactions with multiple reagent production sources of the CDC 2019-Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) real-time reverse transcriptase RT-PCR diagnostic panel.
| Reagent source | N1 target | N3 target |
|---|---|---|
| Reference Validation Reagents (pre-EUA) | 0% false positive | 0.5–2% false positive |
| Ct values 33–38 | ||
| Sequence: Primers and probe interaction | ||
| Emergency Use Authorization material (EUA-kit) | 2% false positive | 97% false positive |
| Ct values 38 | Ct values 34–39 | |
| Full length product | Sequence: Primers and probe interaction | |
| Sequence: Contaminant DNA | ||
| Commercial Vendor | NT | 0.5–2% false positive |
| Ct values 34–39 | ||
| Sequence: Primers and probe interaction |
NT—not tested in this evaluation. The N2 components were never reported to result in false reactivity and therefore were not part of this evaluation.
Fig 1Next generation sequence data from products of the EUA Kit N1.
34% of reads generated from the EUA-kit N1 NTC reaction with false-positive reactivity mapped to the SARS-CoV-2 Wuhan-Hu-1 reference sequence (highlighted sequence at top) but contained four distinguishing SNPs (highlighted in the mapped reads) consistent with a contaminating template synthesized at CDC around the same time as the kit production (S1a Fig). The N1 primer and probe binding sites are annotated above the reference sequence.
Sequencing results of RT-PCR products demonstrated the source of false reactivity in N1 and N3 components.
| RT-PCR Components | Reagent Source | % Reads Mapped to Reference | % Template Contaminant | % Reads Mapped to Oligonucleotides | % Reads Involving Probe |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N1_pc (n = 1) | EUA-kit | 96% | nd | 4% | <1% |
| N1_fp (n = 2) | EUA-kit | nd | 34% (0%) | 66% (0%) | <1% (0%) |
| N3_fp (n = 2) | pre-EUA | nd | nd | 98% (1%) | 51% (2%) |
| N3_pc (n = 1) | EUA-kit | 42% | nd | 58% | <1% |
| N3_fp (n = 14) | EUA-kit | nd | nd | >99% (0%) | 37% (4%) |
| N3_fp (n = 6) | Commercial | nd | nd | 94% (6%) | 43% (10%) |
nd: not detected.
i) pc: positive control; fp: false-positive reactivity during RT-PCR.
ii) EUA-kit: Emergency Use Authorization (first lot of CDC distributed kits); pre-EUA: an aliquot of the materials from the internal CLIA validation of the assay; Commercial: components ordered from a commercial supplier.
iii) reference is the CDC 2019-Novel Coronavirus Real-Time RT-PCR Diagnostic Panel positive control which is derived from the Wuhan-Hu-1 sequence (GenBank accession number MN908947).
iv) synthetic template produced by CDC at approximately the same time as kit production containing differentiating bases (Fig 1).
v) the percent of merged reads that contained partial or complete probe sequences and therefore could contribute to false reactive signal during RT-PCR. Due to library preparation, the proportion of NGS reads in each category may not accurately reflect the proportion of product in the RT-PCR output.
The first lot of CDC N1 EUA components was contaminated with a synthetic template (see also Fig 1; S1a and S1b Fig). The N3 components form multimeric molecules involving the probe, leading to fluorescence in the absence of template (Fig 2b). The latter was consistent regardless of the source of oligonucleotides tested. Mean values with standard deviation in parentheses shown for all results with n > 1.
Fig 2a. The NGS read length distribution (insert sizes after adapter and quality trimming) from the EUA-kit N3 false positive product demonstrating three prominent populations of molecules at 36 bp, 46 bp, and 58 bp in length. All three populations were identified as originating from the N3 assay components and comprise oligonucleotide duplex or triplex molecules (Fig 2b). b. Representative NGS reads from the three most common populations of the EUA-kit N3 false-positive RT-PCR reaction products (Fig 2a). N3 primers and probes are mapped below each read (reverse primer shown in reverse-complement). The 58 bp product and 36 bp products involve the probe and therefore would have generated fluorescence in the absence of template during the reaction. These same populations of products were generated from all three sets of primers and probes (pre-EUA, EUA-kit, commercial vendor).