SARS-CoV-2 RNA Extraction Using Magnetic Beads for Rapid Large-Scale Testing by RT-qPCR and RT-LAMP

Steffen Klein(Heidelberg University), Thorsten G. Müller(Heidelberg University), Dina Khalid(Heidelberg University), Vera Sonntag-Buck(Heidelberg University), Anke‐Mareil Heuser(Heidelberg University), Bärbel Glass(Heidelberg University), Matthias Meurer(German Cancer Research Center), Ivonne Morales(Heidelberg University), Angelika Schillak(Heidelberg University), Andrew Freistaedter(Heidelberg University), Ina Ambiel(Heidelberg University), Sophie L. Winter(Heidelberg University), Liv Zimmermann(Heidelberg University), Tamara Naumoska(Heidelberg University), Felix Bubeck(Heidelberg University), Daniel Kirrmaier(German Cancer Research Center), Stephanie Ullrich(Heidelberg University), Isabel Barreto Miranda(Heidelberg University), Simon Anders(Heidelberg University), Dirk Grimm(Heidelberg University), Paul Schnitzler(Heidelberg University), Michael Knop(German Cancer Research Center), Hans‐Georg Kräusslich(Heidelberg University), Viet Loan Dao Thi(Heidelberg University), Kathleen Börner(Heidelberg University), Petr Chlanda(Heidelberg University)
Viruses
August 7, 2020
Cited by 119Open Access
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Abstract

Rapid large-scale testing is essential for controlling the ongoing pandemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The standard diagnostic pipeline for testing SARS-CoV-2 presence in patients with an ongoing infection is predominantly based on pharyngeal swabs, from which the viral RNA is extracted using commercial kits, followed by reverse transcription and quantitative PCR detection. As a result of the large demand for testing, commercial RNA extraction kits may be limited and, alternatively, non-commercial protocols are needed. Here, we provide a magnetic bead RNA extraction protocol that is predominantly based on in-house made reagents and is performed in 96-well plates supporting large-scale testing. Magnetic bead RNA extraction was benchmarked against the commercial QIAcube extraction platform. Comparable viral RNA detection sensitivity and specificity were obtained by fluorescent and colorimetric reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) using a primer set targeting the N gene, as well as RT-qPCR using a primer set targeting the E gene, showing that the RNA extraction protocol presented here can be combined with a variety of detection methods at high throughput. Importantly, the presented diagnostic workflow can be quickly set up in a laboratory without access to an automated pipetting robot.


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