Milenia GenLine HybriDetect : Universal Lateral Flow Assay Kits
Milenia GenLine HybriDetect : Universal Lateral Flow Assay Kits

Loop mediated isothermal Amplification and Lateral Flow Tips and Tricks for a successful Assay Development

Isothermal Amplification of Nucleic Acids – A Brief Introduction

Table of Contents    

  1. Isothermal Amplification of Nucleic Acids – A Brief Introduction
  2. LAMP – Molecular Insights
  3. The “working horse” for isothermal Amplification
  4. LAMP Readout Strategies
  5. In silico Primer Design
  6. Developing a LAMP-LFA: Labeling Strategies of Primers and CO
  7. The High-Dose-Hook-Effect: a hidden, but common Pitfall
  8. One Step RNA-Detection and Prevention of  Contamination
  9. LAMP as part of new diagnostic detection strategies
  10. Three Papers you may not know, to improve your LAMP-LFA
    1. Speed up your LAMP – Impact of Guanidine Hydrochloride (26)
    2. PS-LAMP – isothermal Amplification at lower temperatures (27)
    3. In LAMP-Hybridization – LFA (16)
  11. Summary
  12. References

Isothermal amplification techniques have developed massively over the past decade. Point-of-Care (POC) applications in particular benefit from the advantages of these methods. As the name suggests, DNA synthesis takes place at constant temperature if isothermal amplification methods are applied. As a result, complex and expensive equipment such as thermal cyclers are not necessary for isothermal amplification reactions. A simple incubator, heating block, water bath, suit vide cooker, the armpit or the closed hand are sufficient to carry out the amplification reaction.


Another important point is the turnaround time. Isothermal amplification techniques can be extremely fast compared to standard PCR. Results can be generated in 10 – 30 minutes of amplification with an impressive sensitivity. Two isothermal amplification techniques are currently the most frequently used methods in the field of Lateral Flow-based POC-Analysis. These are the Recombinase Polymerase Amplification (RPA) and the Loop mediated isothermal Amplification (LAMP). The following table shows a comparison of the relevant features of these methods to the most popular DNA-amplification technique, PCR.


Table 1. Comparison of characteristics of PCR, RPA and LAMP

Comparison of characteristics of PCR, RPA and LAMP



The table emphasizes that each amplification method has its own characteristic performance profile with certain strengths and weaknesses. The following chapters will focus on one of the most used isothermal amplification methods, the LAMP.


LAMP – Molecular Insights

The name “Loop mediated isothermal Amplification” is a very apt description of the molecular amplification mechanism. The LAMP is more complex than the other amplification methods, such as PCR or RPA. A total of four to six primers are necessary to initiate exponential amplification. Here is an attempt to explain the mechanism relatively simply: In the initial phase of amplification, a dumbbell-shaped reaction intermediate is formed due to the elongation of large modular primers and continuous strand displacement of primary amplicons. The terminal loops of this intermediate structure are the starting point for the exponential amplification during LAMP. The following figure (1) and the video-link are explaining the amplification mechanism in detail.

Figure 1. Loop mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) - molecular Insights


Figure 1. LAMP mechanism according to Reference 1

The “working horse” for isothermal Amplification

The characteristic enzyme, which catalyzes the LAMP reaction, is the Bst polymerase. This DNA polymerase originates from Bacillus stearothermophilus and exhibits a strong strand displacement activity and lacks 5 ‘ > 3’ exonuclease activity. To our experience the in silico modified, aptamer blocked Bst 2.0 warmstart polymerase is the perfect tool for easy and fast assay development. Nonspecific amplification is inhibited under 45°C, which allows reaction setup and handling at room temperature. This is the equivalent to the hot start DNA-polymerases used for PCR. Interestingly Bst polymerase exhibits reverse transcriptase activity. The fusion-polymerase Bst 3.0 is optimized for LAMP and is even more suitable for one step RT-LAMP due to the enhanced RT-activity. Taken together the Bst Polymerase is an impressive “working horse” for isothermal amplification from DNA and RNA.


In addition, there are other enzymes that are also suitable for loop mediated isothermal amplification even at higher temperatures. When looking for the perfect LAMP polymerase, it can be worth to take a closer look.


LAMP Readout Strategies

An amplification method or a diagnostic test are often only as good as the associated readout platform. There are a lot of different ways to visualize a LAMP reaction product. Comparable to other DNA-amplification techniques, LAMP products can be detected via agarose electrophoresis or fluorescence detection in a Real-Time cycler. However, these platforms tend to be laborious and require special equipment.

Figure 2. Loop mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) readout strategies


Figure 2. LAMP readout platforms

The possibility of evaluating the amplificate with the naked eye is particularly interesting for POC-compatible applications. A characteristic of this isothermal amplification method is the massive accumulation of reaction products, which qualifies it for simple colorimetric naked eye detection (2). Disadvantages associated with this charming and simple approach are restrictions on the direct sample usage, more complex sample preparation and no chance for a multiplexing. Moreover, nonspecific amplification can result in false positive interpretation of a test. Therefore, the visualization of LAMP-products by Lateral Flow Analysis (LFA) has evolved to a versatile and easy-to-handle alternative. The LAMP-LFA has its strengths in sensitivity, simplicity, multiplex compatibility and, depending on the labeling strategy, an impressive specificity. The Milenia HybriDetect platform is a frequently cited, universal and easy-to-handle Lateral Flow dipstick for individual LAMP-LFA development.


However, each method also has certain weaknesses. In the case of the LAMP-LFA, there are additional working steps compared to direct colorimetric detection. In addition, the amplificate must somehow get onto the LFD, which enables a potential carryover contamination problem. The following table gives an overview of the advantages and disadvantages of each “readout strategy”.


Table 2. Comparison of different detection strategies of LAMP products



In silico Primer Design

In contrast to PCR, the LAMP requires a relatively complex primer design. Four primers are necessary to initiate the LAMP reaction. This includes two loop-forming, modular designed inner primers (FIP and BIP) and two outer primers (F3 and B3), which are necessary for strand displacement of the characteristic FIP- and BIP-related elongation product. Additional loop primers are able to improve the amplification efficiency. Due to the complexity, it is not recommended to design LAMP-Primers by hand. Rather, it makes sense to use available online tools to find an appropriate primer set and use this as a basis for further optimization. Eiken’s PrimerExplorer (V5) and the NEB LAMP – Primer Design Tool are very useful when it comes to LAMP primer design. Lucigen’s webinar video is recommended to learn more about LAMP primer design and assay optimization.


Developing a LAMP-LFA: Labeling Strategies of Primers and CO

One of the major challenges in LAMP-LFA-design is the labeling strategy of the primers, probes or even dNTPs. It is important to understand the impact of the positioning of the required labels, because it has a significant impact on the overall assay LAMP-LFA performance. The following figure gives an overview of a typical LAMP-Primer arrangement.

Figure 3. Standard Arrangement of Primers (and probe) for LAMP


Figure 3. Standard Arrangement of Primers (and probe) for LAMP

For example, the 5’ labeling of LAMP-associated primers can be extremely effective. This strategy can end up in very sensitive LAMP assays. On the other hand, if nonspecific LAMP-products occur, they eventually become detectable on the LFD. Using a labeled probe can significantly enhance the overall specificity, but depending on the probe design, an additional work step makes the workflow more complicated. Another important factor is the probability of cross primer dimers. Some oligonucleotides tend to interact with each other at lower temperatures, which can result in amplification-independent signals on the LFD. For this reason, the FIP- and BIP-labeling can be critical, especially for multiplex applications. It is recommended to pretest the labeled primer-pair in silico (e.g. Thermo’s Multiple Primer Analyzer) before ordering the oligonucleotides. The following table gives an overview of existing labeling strategies.


Table 3. Overview of existing labeling strategies for LAMP-LFA



The High-Dose-Hook-Effect: a hidden, but common Pitfall

As mentioned before, a massive amount of reaction product is created in an efficient LAMP-assay. This characteristic can be already noticed in the composition of a LAMP-reaction. Compared to other amplification techniques a huge amount of primers is introduced into the reaction. Especially the inner primers (FIP and BIP) and the loop primers (LF and LB) are used in high concentrations. Depending on the preferred labeling strategy it is quite likely that too many labels are introduced into the LFA. This would lead to a significant loss of sensitivity due to the high dose hook effect. The hook effect is a typical immunoassay related phenomenon. It occurs, if too many LFA-relevant labels (Biotin / FITC / FAM / DIG) are introduced into the LFD. The general mechanism is based on a limited number of label-specific binding sites in the lateral flow system. If the number of relevant labels exceeds the number of available binding sites in the lateral flow system, the overall number of signal-creating “molecular sandwiches” will be reduced (learn more about high dose hook effect). Ultimately, it is possible to calculate quite precisely which quantities of the LAMP product can be used for LFA. The following table gives an overview of hook effect-associated limitations of the HybriDetect test strips.


Table 4. Orientation for maximum amount of introduced labels into LFA


Table 4. Orientation for maximum amount of introduced labels into LFA



One Step RNA-Detection and Prevention of  Contamination

As already mentioned, the Bst polymerase has additional reverse transcriptase activity. Furthermore LAMP reagents are perfectly compatible with available (warmstart) reverse transcriptases. However, the loop mediated isothermal amplification is a very good choice when sensitive single step detection of RNA is needed (17). This is one of the most important reasons why LAMP is coming so much into focus in the context of SARS-CoV-2 detection (18-21). It’s simplicity, speed, sensitivity, RT-compatibility combined with the diversity of amplicon detection strategies makes LAMP extremely attractive compared to other amplification techniques.


Another important feature is the compatibility of LAMP-reagents with the UDG-system (22-25). The Uracil-DNA-Glycosylase (UDG or UNG) is an enzyme, which is able to catalyze the hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond from deoxyuridine to release uracil from DNA. Therefore, the UDG-System (dUTP’s and UDG-restriction prior to amplification) is a frequently used tool to avoid carryover contaminations. Significantly more DNA is accumulated during a LAMP compared to PCR. This circumstance illustrates the associated risk of carryover contamination when LAMP-reactions have to be opened after amplification (more information about carryover contaminations). For this reason, it is highly recommended to consider implementing the UDG system from the beginning of LAMP-LFA development. A practical approach is the usage of dUTP-containing dNTP-Mix from the beginning. UDG can be implemented afterwards if necessary.


LAMP as part of new diagnostic detection strategies

In the current pandemic, molecular diagnostics have come into public focus as one of the most important tools in the fight against novel coronavirus-2. In this “spotlight” it was possible to direct the focus to alternative and new DNA-/ RNA-detection methods. Especially CRISPR/Cas-based detection strategies, such as SHERLOCK or DETECTR, attracted scientific and public attention. These methods are a combination of nucleic acid amplification and amplicon recognition by a CRISPR-associated protein. Interestingly these ultrasensitive and specific tests benefit from strengths of isothermal amplification. Therefore, LAMP and CRISPR/Cas-based amplicon recognition is the most popular combination to achieve a satisfying test performance. If you want to learn more about these methods, check out the following Articles from the Milenia Authors.


SHERLOCK for detection of SARS-CoV-2


SHERLOCK for post-transplantation monitoring


CRISPR Tools and Techniques


Lateral Flow Readout for CRISPR/Cas-based detection strategies


Three Papers you may not know, to improve your LAMP-LFA

Speed up your LAMP – Impact of Guanidine Hydrochloride (26)

Zhang and co-workers show that the addition of guanidine hydrochloride in LAMP reactions results in a significant improvement of amplification speed and sensitivity without loss of specificity. The study presents data from SARS-CoV-detection assays with several primers sets. The speed of detection could be increased by 20 – 50% compared to reference reactions without guanidine hydrochloride. Interestingly amplification is accelerated with RNA- and DNA-templates. Moreover, another isothermal amplification method (HDA, helicase dependent amplification) can be improved by addition of guanidine hydrochloride. This preprint emphasizes the impact of LAMP-additives.

Figure 4. Impact of Guanidine Hydrochloride on detection speed


Figure 4. Impact of Guanidine Hydrochloride on detection speed (26)

PS-LAMP – isothermal Amplification at lower temperatures (27)

Cai and co-workers had an impressive idea of improving LAMP reaction. They tried to increase the number of loops in LAMP-amplicons in the initial phase of amplification. Therefore they used phosphorothioated primers and named their LAMP-version PS-LAMP. By increasing the number of loops, the amplification efficiency could be improved. The additional usage of chaotropes (urea) and single-stranded DNA-binding proteins (SSB) allowed sensitive and specific isothermal amplification at lower temperatures (40°C).

Figure 5. PS-LAMP mechanism


Figure 5. PS-LAMP mechanism (27)

In LAMP-Hybridization – LFA (16)

The hybridization of LAMP-products after amplification in a separate step is a proven method in the “LAMP-LFA field” (see table 3). Jaroenram and Kampeera et al. proved functionality of their improved hybridization version.

Figure 6. Workflow of LAMP-LFA using inLAMP-Hybridization


Figure 6. Workflow of LAMP-LFA using inLAMP-Hybridization (16)

By using a 5’ FITC-labeled and 3’ elongation blocked (Spacer C3) probe, they were able to visualize LAMP products on the Milenia HybriDetect universal teststrip without an additional hybridization-step. In a practically relevant context it was shown that this alternative labeling strategy enables extremely sensitive and specific detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). Although the idea of using elongation blocked probes in a LAMP is not new (15), this publication proves that the creativity in LAMP-LFA-design can result in excellent assay performance. Hopefully we’ll see the multiplex version of this detection approach very soon!


Summary

The loop mediated isothermal amplification is an impressive amplification technique. Although the development of a LAMP assay is not super easy, there are many tools and resources that can help quickly. The combination of a LAMP with a Lateral Flow-based readout can result in a POC-compatible, low resource test with an excellent detection performance. The LAMP is suitable for very sensitive and specific (multiplex-) detection of DNA and RNA. The compatibility with the UDG-system is an important characteristic, which emphasizes the point-of-need suitability. Moreover, the method itself is continuously being optimized and there are more and more modifications of the original method, which expand the range of applications in all directions. Therefore, the LAMP is increasingly coming into public and scientific focus.


References

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Li, Jinhui et al. “Rapid and sensitive detection of Senecavirus A by reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification combined with a lateral flow dipstick method.” PloS one 14,5 e0216245. 2 May. 2019, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0216245

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Wang, Yi et al. “Detection of nucleic acids and elimination of carryover contamination by using loop-mediated isothermal amplification and antarctic thermal sensitive uracil-DNA-glycosylase in a lateral flow biosensor: application to the detection of Streptococcus pneumoniae.” Mikrochimica acta 185,4 212. 7 Mar. 2018, doi:10.1007/s00604-018-2723-8

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Cai, Sheng et al. “Phosphorothioated Primers Lead to Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification at Low Temperatures.” Analytical chemistry 90,14 (2018): 8290-8294. doi:10.1021/acs.analchem.8b02062