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Field-parallel six-sample microfluidic detection of plant viruses via raffinose-assisted one-pot LAMP-CRISPR/Cas12b.

Wang J, Yang W, Fang J, Xu H, Li J

Crispr

Viral diseases can wipe out entire crops before farmers even know they're present, and catching them early in the field — rather than weeks later after a lab sends results — could save harvests that stock grocery store shelves.

Researchers built a handheld kit that detects plant viruses directly in a field or garden, no laboratory required. It works by using a two-step molecular process: first copying any viral genetic material present in a sample, then using a CRISPR 'molecular scissors' system to flag a positive result on a simple test strip. In field trials, it got the right answer every single time compared to standard lab testing.

Key Findings

1

The ALERT platform detected plant viruses with sensitivity comparable to conventional RT-PCR, the current gold-standard lab method.

2

Field testing showed 100% diagnostic agreement with RT-PCR results across all samples tested.

3

The portable device can process six samples simultaneously in the field using an integrated microfluidic chip and a compact metal incubator.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists developed a portable device that can simultaneously test six plant samples for viral diseases in the field, using CRISPR gene-editing technology combined with a rapid amplification method. It matches the accuracy of laboratory-grade testing without needing a lab.

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Abstract Preview

Plant viral diseases threaten food security globally. Rapid, accurate and early detection of viral pathogens is critical for proactive surveillance and effective control. This study aimed to develo...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

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