LabMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News Expo Clinical Chem. Molecular Diagnostics Hematology Immunology Microbiology Pathology Technology Industry Focus

Low-Cost Diagnostic Developed Using Nanostructures

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 25 Oct 2018
Print article
Image: enVision: Test results are denoted by a color change and could be further analyzed by a smartphone app, making it attractive as a point-of-care diagnostic device (Photo courtesy of National University of Singapore).
Image: enVision: Test results are denoted by a color change and could be further analyzed by a smartphone app, making it attractive as a point-of-care diagnostic device (Photo courtesy of National University of Singapore).
The detection of pathogen nucleic acids has broad applications in infection diagnostics and management. Nucleic acid-based human papillomavirus (HPV) testing is essential to contemporary cervical cancer testing. HPV, the most common sexually transmitted infection, is the primary cause of cervical cancer.

A rapid pathogen detection platform has been developed that uses microfluidics containing integrated circuits of DNA nanostructures. The system called enzyme-assisted nanocomplexes for visual identification of nucleic acids, or enVision, has been shown to be capable of room temperature molecular typing of HPV from cervical samples, as well as discovering certain infections that can be undetectable by most standard methods.

Scientists at the National University of Singapore (Singapore) developed the DNA-enzyme nanostructures, which are complexes made of inactivating aptamers linked to Taq DNA polymerase. When complementary target DNA binds an aptamer, the polymerase is released. The freed polymerases then use biotinylated deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates (dNTPs) circulating in the microfluidic cassette to elongate a nearby signaling nanostructure made from a self-priming hairpin molecule.

The biotinylated dNTPs in the signaling structure will also bind streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase (HRP) molecules in the reaction chamber, and in the presence of diaminobenzidine peroxidase the HRP produces a brown precipitate that can be seen with the naked eye or quantified with a smartphone. The system is also modular. Detection reactions take place in an independent microfluidic assay cassette that is preloaded with nanostructures. In order to perform the assay, a test cassette is mounted to a separate cartridge module that is the same for all tests, containing membranes embedded with the universal signaling nanostructures.

The enVision test was also run on a set of 35 clinical endocervical samples in the study and compared to a gold standard test, the Roche Cobas qPCR-based HPV assay. The authors set up enVision to detect HPV 16 and HPV 18 L1 loci in the patient genome, which are the targets of the Roche test. EnVision achieved about 93% sensitivity and 91% specificity for HPV 16, and for HPV 18 the assay showed 83% sensitivity and 100% specificity compared to the Cobas test. Notably, this level of sensitivity and specificity on clinical samples was seen without any pre-amplification, in an equipment-free assay performed at room temperature.

Compared to quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), enVision showed better sensitivity and fewer false-positive results on a set of synthetic targets representing different subtypes of HPV. The team highlighted that qPCR can be prone to false positives due to non-specific amplification and formation of primer dimers, which, in a clinical setting, can lead to misdiagnoses, wrong or delayed treatments, and patient anxiety and poor health outcomes. The team also compared enVision to a loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) test and observed that LAMP is prone to primer-dimer formation and false-positive results. The study was originally published online on August 13, 2018, in the journal Nature Communications.

Related Links:
National University of Singapore

Gold Member
Flocked Fiber Swabs
Puritan® Patented HydraFlock®
Verification Panels for Assay Development & QC
Seroconversion Panels
New
Respiratory QC Panel
Assayed Respiratory Control Panel
New
Respiratory Bacterial Panel
Real Respiratory Bacterial Panel 2

Print article

Channels

Clinical Chemistry

view channel
Image: The tiny clay-based materials can be customized for a range of medical applications (Photo courtesy of Angira Roy and Sam O’Keefe)

‘Brilliantly Luminous’ Nanoscale Chemical Tool to Improve Disease Detection

Thousands of commercially available glowing molecules known as fluorophores are commonly used in medical imaging, disease detection, biomarker tagging, and chemical analysis. They are also integral in... Read more

Immunology

view channel
Image: The cancer stem cell test can accurately choose more effective treatments (Photo courtesy of University of Cincinnati)

Stem Cell Test Predicts Treatment Outcome for Patients with Platinum-Resistant Ovarian Cancer

Epithelial ovarian cancer frequently responds to chemotherapy initially, but eventually, the tumor develops resistance to the therapy, leading to regrowth. This resistance is partially due to the activation... Read more

Microbiology

view channel
Image: The lab-in-tube assay could improve TB diagnoses in rural or resource-limited areas (Photo courtesy of Kenny Lass/Tulane University)

Handheld Device Delivers Low-Cost TB Results in Less Than One Hour

Tuberculosis (TB) remains the deadliest infectious disease globally, affecting an estimated 10 million people annually. In 2021, about 4.2 million TB cases went undiagnosed or unreported, mainly due to... Read more

Industry

view channel
Image: The collaboration aims to leverage Oxford Nanopore\'s sequencing platform and Cepheid\'s GeneXpert system to advance the field of sequencing for infectious diseases (Photo courtesy of Cepheid)

Cepheid and Oxford Nanopore Technologies Partner on Advancing Automated Sequencing-Based Solutions

Cepheid (Sunnyvale, CA, USA), a leading molecular diagnostics company, and Oxford Nanopore Technologies (Oxford, UK), the company behind a new generation of sequencing-based molecular analysis technologies,... Read more
Sekisui Diagnostics UK Ltd.