Harnessing the RNA-Binding Properties of Cas13a for HIV-1 Self-Testing

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R33 · $889,391 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT ABSTRACT Current HIV-1 RNA detection relies on reverse transcription before PCR-based amplification, which introduces unwanted variables and cannot be easily performed outside a laboratory. The central hypothesis of this application is that the RNA-binding properties of newly discovered CRISPR/Cas13a proteins are suitable for sensitive at-home detection of HIV-1 RNAs without employing RT or amplification steps. This hypothesis was formulated on the basis of the recent discovery by the Doudna Lab that Cas13a binds and cleaves target single-stranded RNAs in a sequence-specific manner (cis cleavage) and subsequently exerts general RNase activity (trans cleavage) that can be exploited for fluorescence-based measurement of the target RNA. In unpublished preliminary results, the Ott/Doudna Labs also show that recombinant Cas13a in combination with HIV-1-specific guide RNAs (crRNAs) enables sensitive detection of HIV-1 RNAs. The central hypothesis will be tested in a two-pronged, highly milestone-driven approach: in the innovation phase (R61), two aims will define the optimal Cas13a homologue/crRNA combination for reliable HIV-1 detection and optimize the read-out technology for home use. Aim 1: To optimize guide RNA (crRNA) and Cas13a protein selection. The applicants will design HIV-specific crRNAs recognizing conserved accessible regions of the target HIV-1 genome and systematically test Cas13a homologs from different bacteria for HIV-specific cis and trans cleavage. At the end of the R61 period in order to progress to the R33 phase, the team will have identified ≥3 optimized crRNA spacer sequences in the HIV-1 genome, selected ≥1 Cas13a homologs with high HIV-specific cis- and trans- ssRNA cleavage rates with low background. Aim 2: To enhance read-out technology and optimize for self- testing. In preliminary results, the Fletcher Lab measured E. coli DNA after PCR amplification detecting fluorescence from an intercalating dye with iPhone-based technology. The applicants will define the optimal sequence for trans-cleavage by Cas13a versus human RNase proteins as well as optimize fluorophore and quencher moieties on the detection oligonucleotide for measurements with mobile phone-based reverse lens microscopy (CellScope). At the end of the R61 period in order to progress to the R33 phase, ≥1 detection sequence will have been identified and ≥1 fluorescence/quencher combination will have been optimized for CellScope detection. The R33 phase consists of one aim, rigorously comparing Cas13a-CellScope results with conventional viral load assays in acutely and chronically infected individuals and adapting the method to home use. Aim 3: To apply optimized Cas13a assay parameters towards building a self-testing device using clinical samples. The team will optimize HIV-1 RNA detection in the context of plasma, serum and whole blood, enhance stability of the test system at room temperature and analyze cryopreserved and fresh patient samples provided by ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10456229
Project number
5R33AI140465-05
Recipient
J. DAVID GLADSTONE INSTITUTES
Principal Investigator
Melanie Maria Ott
Activity code
R33
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$889,391
Award type
5
Project period
2019-08-01 → 2024-07-31