Abstract

Introduction: Due to the coronavirus pandemic, identifying the infected individuals has become key to limiting its spread. Virus nucleic acid real-time RT-PCR testing has become the current standard diagnostic method but high demand could lead to shortages. Therefore, we propose a detection strategy using a one-step nested RT-PCR.

Methodology: The nucleotide region in the ORF1ab gene that has the greatest differences between the human coronavirus and the bat coronavirus was selected. Primers were designed after that sequence. All diagnostic primers are species-specific since the 3´ end of the sequence differs from that of other species. A primer set also creates a synthetic positive control. Amplified products were seen in a 2.5% agarose gel, as well as in an SYBR Green-Based Real-Time RT-PCR.

Results: Amplification was achieved for the positive control and specific regions in both techniques.

Conclusions: This new technique is flexible and easy to implement. It does not require a real-time thermocycler and can be interpreted in agarose gels, as well as adapted to quantify the viral genome. It has the advantage that if the coronavirus mutates in one of the key amplification nucleotides, at least one pair can still amplify, thanks to the four diagnostic primers.

Details

Title
One-step nested RT-PCR for COVID-19 detection: A flexible, locally developed test for SARS-CoV2 nucleic acid detection
Author
Meza-Robles, Carmen; Barajas-Saucedo, Carlos E; Tiburcio-Jimenez, Daniel; Mokay-Ramírez, Karen A; Melnikov, Valery; Rodriguez-Sanchez, Iram P; Martinez-Fierro, Margarita L; Garza-Veloz, Idalia; Zaizar-Fregoso, Sergio A; Guzman-Esquivel, José; Ramirez-Flores, Mario; Newton-Sanchez, Oscar A; Espinoza-Gómez, Francisco; Delgado-Enciso, Osiris G; Alba SH Centeno-Ramirez; Delgado-Enciso, Ivan
Pages
679-684
Section
Coronavirus Pandemic
Publication year
2020
Publication date
Jul 2020
Publisher
Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
ISSN
20366590
e-ISSN
19722680
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2560099480
Copyright
© 2020. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.