Detection of viral RNAs at ambient temperature via reporter proteins produced through the target-splinted ligation of DNA probes

Nat Biomed Eng. 2023 Dec;7(12):1571-1582. doi: 10.1038/s41551-023-01028-y. Epub 2023 May 4.

Abstract

Nucleic acid assays are not typically deployable in point-of-care settings because they require costly and sophisticated equipment for the control of the reaction temperature and for the detection of the signal. Here we report an instrument-free assay for the accurate and multiplexed detection of nucleic acids at ambient temperature. The assay, which we named INSPECTR (for internal splint-pairing expression-cassette translation reaction), leverages the target-specific splinted ligation of DNA probes to generate expression cassettes that can be flexibly designed for the cell-free synthesis of reporter proteins, with enzymatic reporters allowing for a linear detection range spanning four orders of magnitude and peptide reporters (which can be mapped to unique targets) enabling highly multiplexed visual detection. We used INSPECTR to detect a panel of five respiratory viral targets in a single reaction via a lateral-flow readout and ~4,000 copies of viral RNA via additional ambient-temperature rolling circle amplification of the expression cassette. Leveraging synthetic biology to simplify workflows for nucleic acid diagnostics may facilitate their broader applicability at the point of care.

MeSH terms

  • DNA Probes
  • Nucleic Acids*
  • RNA, Viral* / genetics
  • Splints
  • Temperature

Substances

  • RNA, Viral
  • DNA Probes
  • Nucleic Acids