血吸虫病
被忽视的热带疾病
清脆的
热带疾病
曼氏血吸虫
日本血吸虫
生物
分子诊断学
病毒学
一致性
金标准(测试)
医学
血吸虫
免疫学
疾病
病理
生物信息学
蠕虫
内科学
遗传学
基因
作者
Skye R. MacGregor,Donald P. McManus,Haran Sivakumaran,Thomas G. Egwang,Moses Adriko,Pengfei Cai,Catherine A. Gordon,Mary Duke,Juliet D. French,Natasha Collinson,Remigio M. Olveda,Günter Härtel,Carlos Graeff-Teixeira,Malcolm K. Jones,Hong You
出处
期刊:EBioMedicine
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2023-08-01
卷期号:94: 104730-104730
被引量:12
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104730
摘要
Schistosomiasis is a disease that significantly impacts human health in the developing world. Effective diagnostics are urgently needed for improved control of this disease. CRISPR-based technology has rapidly accelerated the development of a revolutionary and powerful diagnostics platform, resulting in the advancement of a class of ultrasensitive, specific, cost-effective and portable diagnostics, typified by applications in COVID-19/cancer diagnosis.We developed CRISPR-based diagnostic platform SHERLOCK (Specific High-sensitivity Enzymatic Reporter unLOCKing) for the detection of Schistosoma japonicum and S. mansoni by combining recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) with CRISPR-Cas13a detection, measured via fluorescent or colorimetric readouts. We evaluated SHERLOCK assays by using 150 faecal/serum samples collected from Schistosoma-infected ARC Swiss mice (female), and 189 human faecal/serum samples obtained from a S. japonicum-endemic area in the Philippines and a S. mansoni-endemic area in Uganda.The S. japonicum SHERLOCK assay achieved 93-100% concordance with gold-standard qPCR detection across all the samples. The S. mansoni SHERLOCK assay demonstrated higher sensitivity than qPCR and was able to detect infection in mouse serum as early as 3 weeks post-infection. In human samples, S. mansoni SHERLOCK had 100% sensitivity when compared to qPCR of faecal and serum samples.These schistosomiasis diagnostic assays demonstrate the potential of SHERLOCK/CRISPR-based diagnostics to provide highly accurate and field-friendly point-of-care tests that could provide the next generation of diagnostic and surveillance tools for parasitic neglected tropical diseases.Australian Infectious Diseases Research Centre seed grant (2022) and National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia (APP1194462, APP2008433).
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