New COVID-19 PCR Test Identifies All SARS-CoV-2 Variants in Positive Patient Sample

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 18 Mar 2022

Accurate and reliable COVID-19 testing needs to be accompanied by identification of specific SARS-CoV-2 variants strains that reveal important information such as the length of incubation period, length of contagious period, transmissibility, pathogenicity, and even changes in the predominant symptoms. The deep sequencing needed to identify SARS-CoV-2 strains is accurate and can identify each mutation present in a sample, but it is costly, slow and requires specialized equipment. Now, a new PCR test uses molecular beacons not only to diagnose COVID-19 infection, but also to identify the specific SARS-CoV-2 variant causing that infection. The methodology is openly available so that it can be replicated by any facility that can run a PCR test.

Using real-time PCR probes designed by Rutgers University (Newark, NJ, USA) and already used around the world for many purposes, researchers designed the Rutgers-RP RT-PCR assay to detect mutations in SARS-CoV-2 that have been shown to increase immune escape, avoid neutralization, and increase transmissibility. They pioneered the use of molecular beacons to identify specific genetic mutations. Molecular beacons are hairpin-shaped molecules that can be designed to selectively bind to a specific mutant sequence, avoiding wild-type sequences that often differ by a single nucleotide.


Image: Each hairpin shaped molecular beacon has a specific color and fluoresces when it binds to its target genetic mutation (Photo courtesy of Rutgers University)

Nine mutations were selected for testing, and the beacon for each has differently colored dyes. Every original variant of concern – alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and omicron – has a unique combination of these mutations, and when the beacon binds to its target molecule, its distinct color can be detected by the assay. Each beacon was tested individually to confirm its specificity to the assigned mutation. Then, the beacons were combined into a multiplex assay and tested by RT-PCR on 26 SARS-CoV2–positive patient samples that had previously been tested and identified with deep sequencing. Two samples were identified as the alpha variant, two as the epsilon variant, and eight as the delta variant. The multiplex assay was in full agreement with results from deep sequencing, with a sensitivity and specificity of 100%.

Researchers report that the test is also very adaptable. When omicron emerged, the investigators were able to design a beacon in less than a month to identify a mutation that is unique to omicron and is important for immune evasion. The investigators identified the omicron variant in 17 of 33 additional patient samples that had been previously tested, and the results were 100% in agreement.

“The SARS-CoV-2 virus is not done with us yet. We desperately need a worldwide monitoring system for the inevitable emerging strains that could be even more contagious or deadly,” the investigators said. “The Rutgers-RP RT-PCR variant assay could be widely deployed in laboratories around the world right now to monitor all the known variants of concern. The assay will be updated with new primer/probe sets for each new important variant that emerges.”

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