4.7 Article

Detection of SARS-CoV-2 Virus by Triplex Enhanced Nucleic Acid Detection Assay (TENADA)

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232315258

Keywords

Polypurine reverse-Hoogsteen hairpin; SARS-CoV-2 RNA detection; COVID diagnosis; thermal lateral flow; electrochemical magnetoassay; fluorescent microarray

Funding

  1. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC) [POC4CoV, CSIC-COV19-041]
  2. CHEST Foundation [040105-268-A1V]
  3. La Marato de TV3 Foundation [202110-30-31-32-33]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) [PID2020-118145RB-I100, PID2021-122271OB-I00, PID2019-107158GB-I00]
  5. Fondos Feder [Bionanosurf E15_17R]
  6. CIBER-Consorcio Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red [CB06/01/0019, CB06/01/0036, CB16/01/00263]
  7. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and European Commision, European Regional Development Fund)
  8. European Commision-NextGenerationEU through CSIC's Global Health Platform (PTI) [EU 2020/2094]
  9. Biobank of the Aragon Health System [PT20/00112]

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An innovative analytical approach based on sandwich oligonucleotide hybridization has been developed, which can be adapted to multiple biosensing devices for the rapid detection of pathogens.
SARS-CoV-2, a positive-strand RNA virus has caused devastating effects. The standard method for COVID diagnosis is based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The method needs expensive reagents and equipment and well-trained personnel and takes a few hours to be completed. The search for faster solutions has led to the development of immunological assays based on antibodies that recognize the viral proteins that are faster and do not require any special equipment. Here, we explore an innovative analytical approach based on the sandwich oligonucleotide hybridization which can be adapted to several biosensing devices including thermal lateral flow and electrochemical devices, as well as fluorescent microarrays. Polypurine reverse-Hoogsteen hairpins (PPRHs) oligonucleotides that form high-affinity triplexes with the polypyrimidine target sequences are used for the efficient capture of the viral genome. Then, a second labeled oligonucleotide is used to detect the formation of a trimolecular complex in a similar way to antigen tests. The reached limit of detection is around 0.01 nM (a few femtomoles) without the use of any amplification steps. The triplex enhanced nucleic acid detection assay (TENADA) can be readily adapted for the detection of any pathogen requiring only the knowledge of the pathogen genome sequence.

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