Modi Nisha H, Dunkley Owen R S, Bell Alexandra G, Hennig Emily, Wats Aanchal, Huang Yujia, Daivaa Naranjargal, Myhrvold Cameron, Xie Yingda L, Banada Padmapriya
Department of Medicine, International Center for Public Health, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ, 07103.
Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544.
medRxiv. 2025 Mar 3:2025.02.27.25322880. doi: 10.1101/2025.02.27.25322880.
Tuberculosis (TB) and COVID-19 are leading infectious diseases with high mortality, caused by and , respectively. Co-infection is common but is often undiagnosed as it is challenging to process both pathogens from a single sample. In this study, we present a simple and efficient method for co-extracting nucleic acids (NA) from these two distinct respiratory pathogens for downstream diagnostic testing. We evaluated three different nucleic acid amplification (NAA)-based platforms, LightCycler480 (LC480) qPCR, Qiacuity digital PCR (dPCR), and Cytation3 for CRISPR-Cas13a-based SHINE-TB/SC2 detection assays. Chelex-100 chelating resin-based boiling preparation method was optimized for NA extraction from saliva and sputum. Saliva showed compatibility with all three platforms, with sensitivity as low as 100 CFU/ml (or 2 genomic copies/μl). This method worked well for sputum using dPCR at 100% (21/21) positivity, though the CRISPR-based SHINE-TB assay showed more variability and sensitivity to sputum inhibitor carry-over, resulting in an 81% positive rate (17/21). Diluting sputum with TE buffer (1:1) improved the detection (2/4). Extraction efficiency of our method was 48%, 62.2%, 86.4% and 99.3% for concentrations 10, 10, 10 and 10 CFU/ml, respectively. The dynamic range for spiked in pooled sputum showed 100% detection (N=8) at ≥10 CFU/ml with all three methods. Dual-pathogen co-extraction and detection of (10 PFU/ml) and (10 CFU/ml) in salivary sputum was successful using CRISPR-Cas13a assays. We have developed a rapid and efficient co-extraction method for multi-pathogen testing across diagnostic platforms and believe this is the first protocol optimized to co-extract and SARS-CoV-2 from a single sample.
结核病(TB)和新冠肺炎是导致高死亡率的主要传染病,分别由结核分枝杆菌和严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)引起。合并感染很常见,但往往未被诊断出来,因为从单个样本中处理两种病原体具有挑战性。在本研究中,我们提出了一种简单有效的方法,用于从这两种不同的呼吸道病原体中共同提取核酸(NA),以用于下游诊断测试。我们评估了三种基于核酸扩增(NAA)的不同平台,即LightCycler480(LC480)定量聚合酶链反应(qPCR)、Qiacuity数字PCR(dPCR)以及用于基于CRISPR-Cas13a的SHINE-TB/SC2检测分析的Cytation3。基于Chelex-100螯合树脂的煮沸制备方法针对从唾液和痰液中提取核酸进行了优化。唾液与所有三种平台均兼容其灵敏度低至100 CFU/ml(或2个基因组拷贝/μl)。使用dPCR时,该方法对痰液的检测效果良好,阳性率为100%(21/21),不过基于CRISPR的SHINE-TB检测分析显示出更大的变异性以及对痰液抑制剂残留的敏感性,导致阳性率为81%(17/21)。用TE缓冲液(1:1)稀释痰液可提高检测率(2/4)。对于浓度分别为10、10、10和10 CFU/ml的样本,我们方法的提取效率分别为48%、62.2%、86.4%和99.3%。在混合痰液中加入的动态范围显示,使用所有三种方法在≥10 CFU/ml时检测率均为100%(N = 8)。使用CRISPR-Cas13a检测分析成功实现了在唾液痰液中对严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(10 PFU/ml)和结核分枝杆菌(10 CFU/ml)的双病原体共同提取和检测。我们开发了一种用于跨诊断平台进行多病原体检测的快速高效的共同提取方法,并且相信这是首个针对从单个样本中共同提取结核分枝杆菌和SARS-CoV-2进行优化的方案。