Scientific Reports (Mar 2024)

Evaluating and optimizing Acid-pH and Direct Lysis RNA extraction for SARS-CoV-2 RNA detection in whole saliva

  • Brayden LaBute,
  • Jackie Fong,
  • Farinaz Ziaee,
  • Robert Gombar,
  • Mathew Stover,
  • Terry Beaudin,
  • Maria Badalova,
  • Qiudi Geng,
  • Ryland Corchis-Scott,
  • Ana Podadera,
  • Kyle Lago,
  • ZhenHuan Xu,
  • Fievel Lim,
  • Felix Chiu,
  • Minghua Fu,
  • Xiaofeng Nie,
  • Yuanmin Wu,
  • Corrina Quan,
  • Caroline Hamm,
  • R. Michael McKay,
  • Kenneth Ng,
  • Lisa A. Porter,
  • Yufeng Tong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-54183-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract COVID-19 has been a global public health and economic challenge. Screening for the SARS-CoV-2 virus has been a key part of disease mitigation while the world continues to move forward, and lessons learned will benefit disease detection beyond COVID-19. Saliva specimen collection offers a less invasive, time- and cost-effective alternative to standard nasopharyngeal swabs. We optimized two different methods of saliva sample processing for RT-qPCR testing. Two methods were optimized to provide two cost-efficient ways to do testing for a minimum of four samples by pooling in a 2.0 mL tube and decrease the need for more highly trained personnel. Acid-pH-based RNA extraction method can be done without the need for expensive kits. Direct Lysis is a quick one-step reaction that can be applied quickly. Our optimized Acid-pH and Direct Lysis protocols are reliable and reproducible, detecting the beta-2 microglobulin (B2M) mRNA in saliva as an internal control from 97 to 96.7% of samples, respectively. The cycle threshold (Ct) values for B2M were significantly higher in the Direct Lysis protocol than in the Acid-pH protocol. The limit of detection for N1 gene was higher in Direct Lysis at ≤ 5 copies/μL than Acid-pH. Saliva samples collected over the course of several days from two COVID-positive individuals demonstrated Ct values for N1 that were consistently higher from Direct Lysis compared to Acid-pH. Collectively, this work supports that each of these techniques can be used to screen for SARS-CoV-2 in saliva for a cost-effective screening platform.