Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

Ultrasensitive single-step CRISPR detection of monkeypox virus in minutes with a vest-pocket diagnostic device

  • Yunxiang Wang,
  • Hong Chen,
  • Kai Lin,
  • Yongjun Han,
  • Zhixia Gu,
  • Hongjuan Wei,
  • Kai Mu,
  • Dongfeng Wang,
  • Liyan Liu,
  • Ronghua Jin,
  • Rui Song,
  • Zhen Rong,
  • Shengqi Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47518-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract The emerging monkeypox virus (MPXV) has raised global health concern, thereby highlighting the need for rapid, sensitive, and easy-to-use diagnostics. Here, we develop a single-step CRISPR-based diagnostic platform, termed SCOPE (Streamlined CRISPR On Pod Evaluation platform), for field-deployable ultrasensitive detection of MPXV in resource-limited settings. The viral nucleic acids are rapidly released from the rash fluid swab, oral swab, saliva, and urine samples in 2 min via a streamlined viral lysis protocol, followed by a 10-min single-step recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA)-CRISPR/Cas13a reaction. A pod-shaped vest-pocket analysis device achieves the whole process for reaction execution, signal acquisition, and result interpretation. SCOPE can detect as low as 0.5 copies/µL (2.5 copies/reaction) of MPXV within 15 min from the sample input to the answer. We validate the developed assay on 102 clinical samples from male patients / volunteers, and the testing results are 100% concordant with the real-time PCR. SCOPE achieves a single-molecular level sensitivity in minutes with a simplified procedure performed on a miniaturized wireless device, which is expected to spur substantial progress to enable the practice application of CRISPR-based diagnostics techniques in a point-of-care setting.