Literature DB >> 35479118

Homebrew: Protocol for glassmilk-based nucleic-acid extraction for SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics.

Robert Page1, Edward Scourfield2, Mattia Ficarelli2, Stuart W McKellar2, Kwok Leung Lee2, Thomas J A Maguire2, Clement Bouton2, Maria Jose Lista2, Stuart J D Neil2, Michael H Malim2, Mark Zuckerman3, Hannah E Mischo2, Rocio T Martinez-Nunez2.   

Abstract

The gold standard protocol for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection detection remains reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), which detects viral RNA more sensitively than any other approach. Here, we present Homebrew, a low-cost protocol to extract RNA using widely available reagents. Homebrew is as sensitive as commercially available RNA extraction kits. Homebrew allows for sample pooling and can be adapted for automation in high-throughput settings. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Page et al. (2022).
© 2022 The Authors.

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Keywords:  Immunology; Microbiology; Molecular Biology

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35479118      PMCID: PMC8938258          DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2022.101300

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  STAR Protoc        ISSN: 2666-1667


Before you begin

The protocol below describes the specific steps for using combined nose and throat swabs for SARS-CoV-2 detection employing the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (CDC) N1, N2 and RNaseP primers (Integrated DNA Technologies, 10006770) and TaqMan Fast Virus 1-Step Master Mix (Thermo Fisher, 4444434). All reagents below can be prepared in large batches, batch-tested and stored at ambient temperature (16°C–40°C). In our hands reagents did not lose activity over this temperature scale over more than 12 months storage. This protocol allows for individual vs pooled samples. The first and second steps, inactivation and RNA binding, are done differently. Please choose one or another. We have made separate sections for testing individual and pooled samples. Details on the sensitivity of our pooling method can be found in Page et al. (2022).

Institutional permissions

Samples for this study were provided under KCL TEST (KCL Ethics Ref: 21150); and as Service Delivery for King’s College Hospital. Samples were combined nose and throat swabs previously tested at KCL TEST or King’s College Hospital as part of a potential service development. All samples were anonymized and assessed after being diagnosed as SARS-CoV-2 positive by the hospital or negative by KCL TEST. We assessed a range of Ct values in order to represent a broad range of viral loads. Positive swabs were inactivated in a Category 3 facility employing 90°C 10 min in a dry bead bath as per Lista et al. (2021). Abbreviations: GM: glassmilk; GM_MB: glassmilk master buffer.

Preparation of the glassmilk

Timing: 5 h This step describes how the matrix for nucleic acid capture is prepared. Silicon dioxide (Sigma, 342890) once prepared will be referred as glassmilk, GM or silica matrix. The final concentration is 700 mg/mL and thus 21 g will render 30 mL of glassmilk, enough for 3,000 extractions. Suspend 21 g silicon dioxide 325 mesh (Sigma 342890) in 40 mL 10% HCl in a 50 mL tube. Polypropylene tubes are appropriate. CAUTION: 10% HCl is highly corrosive. Only use under a fume hood when handling HCl. If diluting from a concentrated stock, add acid to water. This acid wash of silica matrix ensures getting rid of contaminants that may interfere with downstream qRT-PCR (e.g., RNAseP detection due to contamination). Agitate suspension for 4 h on a tube roller. Secure the cap with parafilm to minimize the risk of spillages. If no roller is available move every 10 min manually by gently inverting the tube 10 times. Centrifuge at 2,000 g for 5 min. Carefully remove HCl with a pipette and store in appropriate double container for reuse. HCl can be reused for this washing procedure multiple times. Do not dispose of HCl by pouring down the drain with copious amounts of water if it has not been previously neutralized. Spills may be neutralized with sodium bicarbonate or baking soda. Resuspend the silica pellet with 40 mL single deionized water. Resuspend silica in a 50 mL polypropylene tube by agitation, vortexing at ∼ 134 × g or repeated tapping against a surface or hand so no HCl is ‘trapped’ in the pellet. Centrifuge at 2,000 g for 5 min. Remove wash water and dispose of through the drain. Flush with plenty of water. Repeat step 2 for a total of 6 washes. Before removing the final wash, measure pH of the supernatant with a strip, it should be between 7 and 8. If acidic pH is detected perform more water washes and measure pH after each wash until pH 7–8 is achieved. Remove the supernatant, the pellet should now be white. Resuspend silica in a final volume of 30 mL of H2O – if possible, use MilliQ or RNAse free H2O. Aliquot in clean 1.5 mL tubes and keep at 16°C–40°C. We have kept the glass milk for 18 months without loss in performance at temperature ranging from 4°C–40°C.

Preparation of SDS, NaCl, and 70% ethanol

Timing: 15 min Prepare 1.25 M NaCl. To prepare 500 mL 1.25 M NaCl, weight 36.525 g NaCl (Sigma/Merck S3014-500G) and dissolve in 500 mL H2O. Store at 16°C–40°C. 1.25 M NaCl is stable at 16°C–40°C for at least 6 months. Prepare 70% EtOH. To prepare 500 mL, mix 350 mL pure EtOH (Fisher Scientific, 10644795) and 150 mL H2O. Ethanol should be kept in the dark if at all possible (by covering the tube with foil for example), at 16°C–40°C. Prepare 4% SDS. From a 10% SDS stock, prepare 500 mL by mixing 200 mL 10% SDS (Fisher Scientific, 10552785) with 300 mL H2O. Keep SDS solution at 16°C–40°C. We recommend purchasing a readily dissolved SDS stock. Keep SDS solution at 16°C–40°C. SDS may precipitate at low temperatures; if precipitates are observed, please warm up and re-dissolve prior to use. SDS can also be prepared from powder. However, this is highly dangerous and needs to be performed under the fume-hood.

Prepare glassmilk master buffer (GM-MB) for individual samples

Timing: 5 min Prepare the GM_MB fresh every time prior to use. Follow this table for calculating volumes (in microliter) to prepare enough glassmilk master buffer GM_MB) for all samples. Consider always an excess of 10% (i.e., prepare enough for 11 samples if you are analyzing 10). The table below shows calculations for one and twenty-four samples. CRITICAL: Make sure the master buffer is properly mixed and shake vigorously every 3 samples to avoid glassmilk pelleting.

Prepare glassmilk master buffer (GM_MB) for pooled samples

Timing: 5 min Prepare the GM_MB fresh every time prior to use. Pooling samples can accelerate processing and considerably reduce the costs of sample processing. We have tested Homebrew and determined that the method allows for pooling of up to 19 negative samples with one positive sample (Page et al., 2022). For use of the pooled protocol, we found that 20 μL glassmilk is sufficient to capture the nucleic acid material of up to 20 swabs and obtain a clearly visible pellet of glassmilk without losing sensitivity. If using less than 20 swabs, only adjust NaCl and isopropanol amounts. The glassmilk-master buffer recipe will change to:

Key resources table

Materials and equipment

Keep at 16°C–40°C. CRITICAL: Both GITC and NaI are toxic. According to their MSDS: GITC has acute oral toxicity Category 4, acute dermal toxicity Category 4, acute Inhalation Toxicity - Dusts and Mists Category 4, skin Corrosion/Irritation Category 1 C and serious Eye Damage/Eye Irritation Category 1; NaI has acute oral toxicity Category 4, acute dermal toxicity Category 4, acute Inhalation Toxicity - Dusts and Mists Category 4, skin Corrosion/Irritation Category 1 C and serious Eye Damage/Eye Irritation Category 1. The homebrew method employs NaCl as its preferred chaotropic. NaCl is not considered hazardous by the 2012 OSHA Hazard Communication Standard (29 CFR 1910.1200). If for some reason NaCl was not available, NaI or GITC can be used instead as per Page et al., 2022.

Step-by-step method details

When performing this protocol for the first time, we recommend either using spiked swab material with a known positive control (e.g., commercially available or laboratory-grown virus) or using swabs that have previously been tested by conventional extraction methods. Every extraction should include a positive control (in our case we employed laboratory-grown virus) and a negative extraction control (H2O). All steps in the extraction are performed at ambient temperature (16°C–40°C) unless otherwise stated. We have performed this protocol on swabs from various different sources that have been stored at various temperatures (16°C to 40°C or −80°C) before analysis. As far as we can attest, all different viral transport media that are currently in circulation allow for successful isolation of viral material. Viral transport medium can be prepared as per CDC recommendation (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/downloads/Viral-Transport-Medium.pdf), i.e., 2% FBS 100 μg /mL Gentamicin 0.5 μg /mL Amphotericin B in Hanks Balanced Salt Solution (HBSS). Please refer to Page et al., 2022 for a more complete characterization of the robustness of this method.

Inactivation and lysis of swab material (individual samples)

Timing: 1 min This step inactivates potential SARS-CoV-2 viral particles and aids disruption of enveloped viral particles and subsequent solubilization of genetic material. We recommend heat inactivation using a dry bead bath (either 70°C or 90°C for 10–30 min) prior to addition of SDS as it allows safe handling of otherwise infectious samples while preserving sensitivity of detection (Lista et al., 2021). Inactivated swabs must ALWAYS be opened in a microbiological safety cabinet class I when possible (class II when I not available) for the safety of the handler. Once swab material is non inactivated samples can be handled on a regular bench. CRITICAL: If swab samples are not heat inactivated, add SDS in a microbiological safety cabinet. Add 100 μL of 4% SDS per 100 μL of swab sample. Scale up appropriately if more swab sample is used. Incubation with SDS is not required. CRITICAL: Check that there are no SDS precipitates. If precipitates are observed, place SDS in a lukewarm bath until precipitates are dissolved.

Inactivation and lysis of swab material (pooled samples)

If using the pooled protocol, scale up the amount of 4% SDS accordingly. For example, for 20 samples of 100 μL each, add 20 × 100 μL (=2 mL) 4% SDS. CRITICAL: If swab samples are not heat inactivated, add SDS in a microbiological safety cabinet. CRITICAL: Check that there are no SDS precipitates. If precipitates are observed, place SDS in a lukewarm bath until precipitates are dissolved.

Mastermix addition and RNA binding (individual samples)

Timing: 6 min In this step, RNA from the lysed sample binds to glassmilk. GM_MB contains NaCl as chaotropic agent, isopropanol to increase binding to glassmilk and glassmilk as RNA-binding matrix. Prepare GM_MB buffer as per instructions above. Prepare enough for all samples and consider an extra 10% for pipetting errors. Add 610 μL of GM_MB to 200 μL of lysed swab (100 μL 4% SDS + 100 μL swab sample). Incubate 5 min at 16°C–40°C to allow RNA binding.

Mastermix addition and RNA binding (pooled samples)

Timing: 6 min Prepare GM_MB buffer as per instructions above. Prepare enough for all samples and consider an extra 10% for pipetting errors. This will contain 20 μL of glassmilk and a multiple per sample of 400 μL isopropanol and 200 μL 1.25 M NaCL. Due to the increased volume, pooled samples are mixed in a Falcon tube. Mix well by vortexing. Incubate 5 min at 16°C–40°C to allow RNA binding.

RNA cleaning

Timing: 3 min In this step, RNA from the lysed samples binds to glassmilk. The bound RNA is pelleted and washed with 70% ethanol twice to remove excess proteins in the sample and increase the sensitivity of the PCR. Spin the sample at 4,500 g for 15 s. Discard the supernatant by decanting into a waste basin. The pellet will not detach (Methods video S1: Decanting). Disaggregate the pellet of GM by tapping the plastic tube against a rack or by vortexing (Figure 1 and Methods video S2, Disaggregation by tapping).
Figure 1

Resuspension of GM pellet by tapping against a tube rack

If using the pooled protocol, resuspend the pellet from the Falcon tube and transfer with a pipette to a microcentrifuge tube. Continue processing as described for individual samples. Resuspension of GM pellet by tapping against a tube rack Add 500 μL of 70% ethanol and mix by flicking the tube. Steps 11 and 12 can be inverted, i.e., add 500 μL of 70% ethanol to the GM pellet and then tap the plastic tube against a rack or vortexing to resuspend (Methods video S3, GM resuspension with ethanol). Spin the sample at 4,500 g for 15 s. Discard the supernatant by decanting (Methods video S1, Decanting). Repeat steps 11–14. Spin the tube at 7,000 × g for 15 s to allow complete ethanol removal. Remove all remaining 70% ethanol with a pipette. Air dry at 65°C for 5 min in a heat block or equivalent to remove all ethanol from the pelleted GM with bound RNA (Figure 2).
Figure 2

Example of air drying GM pellet in a heat block

Example of air drying GM pellet in a heat block

Methods video S1. Decanting of supernatant

This movie shows that the GM pellet remains attached to the tube, related to step 10.

Methods video S2. Disaggregation by tapping

This movie shows resuspension of the GM pellet by tapping the plastic tube against a rack, related to step 11.

Methods video S3. GM resuspension with ethanol

This movie shows addition of ethanol to the GM pellet prior to pellet resuspension by tapping the plastic tube against a rack, related to steps 10–12 and 12 note.

RNA elution

Timing: 1 min In this step RNA is released from the GM matrix in nuclease-free water. To elute RNA from the dry GM matrix: Resuspend pellet in 50 μL of nuclease-free water (Methods video S4, GM resuspension with water). Spin the sample at 4,500 g for 15 s. Take off 45 μL from the supernatant and transfer to a clean tube (Methods video S5, Elution). Proceed to downstream detection of viral RNA. We routinely use qRT-PCR but other methods such as RT-LAMP (reverse transcription and loop-mediated isothermal amplification) or CRISPR-based methods can also be employed. We employed 50 μL of nuclease-free water to resuspend the GM matrix. Higher volumes such as 70 μL may be employed but lower volumes will likely not resuspend the GM matrix and/or carry over matrix to the downstream reaction. Pause point: Extracted RNA can be frozen at this step. Long term storage is recommended at −80°C but short-term storage (∼1 week) can be done at −20°C.

Methods video S4. GM resuspension with water

This movie shows the resuspension of the dried GM pellet in 50 μl of water, related to step 19.

Methods video S5. Elution

This movie shows the removal of 45 μl of supernatant containing RNA in a clean tube for downstream analysis, related to step 21.

Reverse transcription and PCR

This step allows the detection of specific genes from SARS-CoV-2 in the eluted RNA, utilizing an internal human gene (RNAse P) as control of extraction. Prepare the RT-PCR reaction master mix with the following format. Importantly, always include a non-template control, in which the RNA is replaced with H2O. When possible, prepare the PCR reaction and plate at a different location to that where swabs are handled to reduce risk of contamination. The positive control from the RNA extraction can be employed as positive control in the RT-PCR. qRT-PCR reaction master mix (TaqMan Fast Virus 1-Step Master Mix) PCR cycling conditions (Fast mode) ∗ Controls must include positive and negative extraction controls and non-template PCR control. For this step pooled and individual samples are treated equally. i.e., both are eluted in 50 μl water and 5 μl are used per technical replicate. For the purpose of establishing this protocol, we performed RT-PCR reactions in technical duplicates, for analytical purposes, it is custom to just perform one technical replicate. The limit of detection for our method, employing this master mix is Ct 36 (Page et al., 2022). Other qRT-PCR conditions may be employed (Lista et al., 2021; Reijns et al., 2020).

Expected outcomes

Please refer to Page et al., 2022 for a complete description and troubleshooting of the method, including RNA binding capacity, limitation to isolate human cellular RNA or lack of effect of inhibitors such as blood in the quantification of SARS-CoV-2 in swab samples. Homebrew allows for effective isolation of RNA and not DNA. In the study by Page et al., we systematically compare Homebrew to QIAamp Viral RNA Mini Kit (QIAGEN) as per CDC-recommendation. We typically are within 1–3 Ct of the values obtained with RNA isolated using the QIAamp kit. Recovery of pure cellular total RNA is ∼30% from a 5 μg preparation (Page et al., 2022). Although we recommend prior heat inactivation of swabs prior to the addition of SDS, SDS inactivates SARS-CoV-2 at concentrations as low as 0.5% (Patterson et al., 2020). We recommend prior heat inactivation to increase the speed of processing since all steps (including the addition of 4% SDS) can then be performed safely on a bench. Quantification of SARS-CoV-2 material in RNA isolated from swabs using Homebrew has been validated employing the primer-probe and qPCR reagents listed above. According to our parameters, we consider negative/positive/inconclusive/void samples: Positive/negative/void/inconclusive thresholds Inconclusive samples are those in which viral presence is difficult to determine, and void samples are those that have little presence of RNAseP, insufficient to determine a true negative result. In both cases, our recommendation is to ask for a new sample from the same individual, for testing as soon as possible. Void samples may be due to technical errors such as adding variable amounts of GM to each tube, which are reduced when preparing GM_MB rather than adding components separately. In our experience these are caused by insufficient biological material or wrong storage (e.g., repeated freeze-thaw cycles). We iterate the need for including a positive and a negative extraction control, as specified above. We recommend a positive control with a Ct of around 30 to minimize cross-contamination and demonstrate effective RNA extraction. Negative controls (extraction and qRT-PCR) should not amplify viral targets or RNAseP at all. Small contaminations with RNAseP may occur given its presence in plastics but should be kept at least at 5Ct difference from the maximum allowed. As shown in the study by Page et al. (Page et al., 2022) we do not see a reduction in sensitivity when pooling up to 20 samples. Pooling is only recommended in low prevalence settings, since positive pools of samples must be reanalyzed to determine which sample(s) are positive among the pool, and it depends on the pool size (Cherif et al., 2020). In our case, positive rate should be less than 1 in 20 (5%), otherwise all pools of 20 samples will need to be re-tested given that each pool will (statistically) be positive

Limitations

We have validated our method for SARS-CoV-2 RNA detection from combined nose and throat swab samples, including those that contain inhibitors such as blood (Page et al., 2022). Our method allows for the sub-optimal isolation of cellular RNA from cells and further modifications to the lysis step would be required to improve its efficiency and the quality of isolated RNA. We did not measure the variability between different batches of GM preparations. RNA extraction reproducibility was demonstrated employing serial dilutions of SARS-CoV-2 samples as well as comparable results to gold-standard clinically diagnosed swabs in ∼ 100 samples (Page et al., 2022). We recommend anyone starting to use Homebrew to carefully validate this protocol with swabs that have already been tested with alternative isolation methods until the user feels confident in our method. Although greatly decreasing the cost per sample, we have used our method with conventional qRT-PCR analysis. Sourcing the reagents for qPCR analysis is in our experience less of a bottleneck, but sufficient provision of reagents should be carefully planned in. Availability of real time thermocyclers is a limitation on the use of homebrew for qRT-PCR, but colorimetric and isothermal methods may still benefit from it (Alcántara et al., 2021; Baba et al., 2021; Joung et al., 2020). Homebrew employing GM cannot be automated. However, our data employing carboxylated magnetic beads (Page et al., 2022) show comparable sensitivity, with those being amenable to automatization.

Troubleshooting

Problem 1

GM not resuspending after centrifugation.

Potential solution

Pull tube over a microtube rack (Methods videos S1 and S2). This will create a vigorous small shaking that in our experience is most effective to resuspend the GM. Shake vigorously, vortex or flick the tube until resuspended.

Problem 2

Positive extraction control failure. GM contains ethanol in the last step. Carry over ethanol can negatively affect downstream processing i.e., transcription and/or PCR. A void result in the positive extraction control suggests that the extraction has not been efficient, and ethanol carry-over must be the first step to check. It is important to check if more than 50 μL is present in the tube after elution; typically GM absorbs 5 μL of the 50 μL and thus carry-over ethanol can be easily spotted at this stage. Figure 3 depicts a wet (left) vs. a dry (right) GM pellet.
Figure 3

Wet versus dry GM pellet

Left-over ethanol is inhibitory to PCR amplification (left). Completely dried pellet is white and defined (right).

Wet versus dry GM pellet Left-over ethanol is inhibitory to PCR amplification (left). Completely dried pellet is white and defined (right). Air dry the pellet for 2 extra minutes.

Problem 3

Multiple void results. We typically consider a failed extraction batch when more than 10% of all samples extracted are ‘void’, i.e., there is no amplification of the internal control (RNAseP in our case). This is likely due to carry-over ethanol or deficient mixing of the GM-MB. Repeat the extraction of those samples (with positive and negative extraction controls) ensuring adequate mixing of GM-MB, incubation with the samples and air-drying of the GM pellet. Ensure that all reagents have been filtered through a 0.2 μm PES membrane to remove contaminating RNases. Repeat extraction with a confirmed positive swab in parallel.

Problem 4

Contamination of negative extraction control. Given that PCR is an exponential reaction, it can be relatively easy to contaminate reagents with PCR products. To minimize this risk we recommend performing RNA extractions and qRT-PCR set up in different benches/rooms when possible. Aliquoting of negative and positive controls will also minimize risks of cross-contamination. Use of filter tips is highly recommended. If there is suspected contamination of one of the reagents discard and aliquot from the stock. If there is suspected contamination of the glassmilk, perform an acid wash as in the preparation steps.

Problem 5

GM pellet is over dried. We recommend air drying the GM pellet at 65°C for 5 min (Figure 2). If sample appears over dried i.e., the GM pellet does not resuspend (Methods video S4, GM resuspension with water), consider warming up water at 65°C prior to resuspending again. If this does not resuspend the GM pellet, we recommend re-extraction and careful monitoring of the drying process.

Resource availability

Lead contact

Further information and requests for resources and reagents should be directed to and will be fulfilled by the lead contact, Rocio T Martinez-Nunez (rocio.martinez_nunez@kcl.ac.uk).

Materials availability

This study did not generate new unique reagents.
Samples #10% addedGlassmilk (μL)Final 7 μg / sampleIsopropanol (μL)Final 65%NaCl (μL)Final 0.4 M
1N/A10400200
10111104,4002,200
2426.426410,5605,280
Samples #10% addedGlassmilk (μL)Isopropanol (μL)NaCl (μL)
2022208,8004,400
1011204,4002,200
40444017,6008,800
REAGENT or RESOURCESOURCEIDENTIFIER
Chemicals, peptides, and recombinant proteins

Silicon dioxide 325 meshSigma/MerckCat# 342890
Carboxylate modified magnetic SpeedBeadsTMSigma/MerckCat# GE45152105050250
SDS (500 g)Sigma/MerckCat# L3771-500G
10% SDS (1 L)Fisher ScientificCat# 10552785
NaCl (500 g)Sigma/MerckCat# S3014-500G
NaI (sodium iodide)Sigma/MerckCat# 383112-100G
GITC (Guanidine Isothiocyanate)Sigma/MerckCat# 5120-250GM
Isopropanol (2.5 L)Fisher ScientificCat# BP2618-212 2.5L
Absolute ethanol (500 mL)Fisher ScientificCat# 10644795
Nuclease Free Water (500 mL)Fisher ScientificCat# AM9930

Critical commercial assays

TaqMan Fast Virus 1-Step Master MixThermo Fisher ScientificCat# 4444434
2019-nCov CDC EUA KitIntegrated DNA TechnologiesCat# 10006770

Deposited data

Deposited in Mendeley Data: https://doi.org/10.17632/b2mscbnhmg.1

Experimental models: Organisms/strains

Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Obtained from Public Health England

Oligonucleotides

2019-nCoV_N1 Forward Primer: GAC CCC AAA ATC AGC GAA ATCDC2019-nCoV_N1-F500 nM
2019-nCoV_N1 Reverse Primer: TCT GGT TAC TGC CAG TTG AAT CTGCDC2019-nCoV_N1-R500 nM
2019-nCoV_N1 Probe: FAM-ACC CCG CAT TAC GTT TGG TGG ACC-BHQ1NOTE: This probe spans the N:P13L mutation present in the Omicron variant (B.1.1.529)CDC2019-nCoV_N1-P150 nM
2019-nCoV_N2 Forward Primer: TTA CAA ACA TTG GCC GCA AACDC2019-nCoV_N2-F500 nM
2019-nCoV_N2 Reverse Primer: GCG CGA CAT TCC GAA GAACDC2019-nCoV_N2-R500 nM
2019-nCoV_N2 Probe: FAM-ACA ATT TGC CCC CAG CGC TTC AG-BHQ1CDC2019-nCoV_N2-P125 nM
RNAse P Forward Primer: AGA TTT GGA CCT GCG AGC GCDCRP-F 500 nM
RNAse P Reverse Primer: GAG CGG CTG TCT CCA CAA GTCDCRP-R 500 nM
RNAse P Probe: FAM – TTC TGA CCT GAA GGC TCT GCG CG – BHQ-1CDCRP-P 125 nM

Software and algorithms

GraphPad Prismhttps://www.graphpad.com/scientific-software/prism/
QuantStudio SoftwareQS5 (v.1.5.2) https://www.thermofisher.com/uk/en/home/global/forms/life-science/quantstudio-3-5-software.htmlQS7 Flex (v1.7.1): https://www.thermofisher.com/uk/en/home/global/forms/life-science/quantstudio-6-7-flex-software.html
ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
NaI (sodium iodide)1.25 M100 μL/100 μL swab
GITC (Guanidine Isothiocyanate)1.25 M100 μL/100 μL swab

Keep at 16°C–40°C.

qRT-PCR reaction master mix (TaqMan Fast Virus 1-Step Master Mix)

ReagentAmount/reaction (μL)10 reactions + 10% (μL) including 3 controls∗24 reactions + 10% (μL) including 3 controls∗
RNA template5
Master Mix555132
Pre-mixed primer probe1.516.539.6
ddH2O8.593.5224.4

PCR cycling conditions (Fast mode)

StepsTemperatureTimeCycles
Reverse Transcription50°C5 min1
Denaturation95°C20 s1
Denaturation95°C3 s45 cycles
Annealing/Extension60°C30 s

Positive/negative/void/inconclusive thresholds

ResultPositive (Ct)Negative (Ct)Inconclusive (Ct)Void (Ct)
N1<36 regardless of N2 amplificationUndetermined≥ 36 and N2 negative
N2<36 regardless of N1 amplificationUndetermined≥ 36 and N1 negative
RNAseP< 35< 35< 35> = 35
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Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2020-12-15       Impact factor: 8.029

4.  Resilient SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics workflows including viral heat inactivation.

Authors:  Maria Jose Lista; Pedro M Matos; Thomas J A Maguire; Kate Poulton; Elena Ortiz-Zapater; Robert Page; Helin Sertkaya; Ana M Ortega-Prieto; Edward Scourfield; Aoife M O'Byrne; Clement Bouton; Ruth E Dickenson; Mattia Ficarelli; Jose M Jimenez-Guardeño; Mark Howard; Gilberto Betancor; Rui Pedro Galao; Suzanne Pickering; Adrian W Signell; Harry Wilson; Penelope Cliff; Mark Tan Kia Ik; Amita Patel; Eithne MacMahon; Emma Cunningham; Katie Doores; Monica Agromayor; Juan Martin-Serrano; Esperanza Perucha; Hannah E Mischo; Manu Shankar-Hari; Rahul Batra; Jonathan Edgeworth; Mark Zuckerman; Michael H Malim; Stuart Neil; Rocio Teresa Martinez-Nunez
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-09-15       Impact factor: 3.752

5.  Diagnostic performance of a colorimetric RT -LAMP for the identification of SARS-CoV-2: A multicenter prospective clinical evaluation in sub-Saharan Africa.

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6.  Homebrew: An economical and sensitive glassmilk-based nucleic-acid extraction method for SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics.

Authors:  Robert Page; Edward Scourfield; Mattia Ficarelli; Stuart W McKellar; Kwok Leung Lee; Thomas J A Maguire; Clement Bouton; Maria Jose Lista; Stuart J D Neil; Michael H Malim; Mark Zuckerman; Hannah E Mischo; Rocio T Martinez-Nunez
Journal:  Cell Rep Methods       Date:  2022-03-03

7.  Detection of SARS-CoV-2 with SHERLOCK One-Pot Testing.

Authors:  Julia Joung; Alim Ladha; Makoto Saito; Nam-Gyun Kim; Ann E Woolley; Michael Segel; Robert P J Barretto; Amardeep Ranu; Rhiannon K Macrae; Guilhem Faure; Eleonora I Ioannidi; Rohan N Krajeski; Robert Bruneau; Meei-Li W Huang; Xu G Yu; Jonathan Z Li; Bruce D Walker; Deborah T Hung; Alexander L Greninger; Keith R Jerome; Jonathan S Gootenberg; Omar O Abudayyeh; Feng Zhang
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 91.245

8.  Unlocking SARS-CoV-2 detection in low- and middle-income countries.

Authors:  Roberto Alcántara; Katherin Peñaranda; Gabriel Mendoza-Rojas; Jose A Nakamoto; Johanna Martins-Luna; Juana Del Valle-Mendoza; Vanessa Adaui; Pohl Milón
Journal:  Cell Rep Methods       Date:  2021-10-21
  8 in total
  1 in total

1.  In-house protocol: spin-based viral RNA purification.

Authors:  Mahmoud M Abdelfattah; Ahmed M Osman; Mohamed A Elnagar; Mohamed F Ibrahim; Magdy Albert; Maya M Talal; Nasra F Abdel Fattah; Samah A Loutfy; Reham Helwa
Journal:  AMB Express       Date:  2022-06-09       Impact factor: 4.126

  1 in total

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