key: cord-0797732-245isuy1 authors: Tabish, Tanveer A.; Narayan, Roger J.; Edirisinghe, Mohan title: Rapid and label-free detection of COVID-19 using coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering microscopy date: 2020-12-24 journal: MRS Commun DOI: 10.1557/mrc.2020.81 sha: 164370f22375fe36bead6fc20da666c322460ec4 doc_id: 797732 cord_uid: 245isuy1 From the 1918 influenza pandemic (H1N1) until the recent 2019 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic, no efficient diagnostic tools have been developed for sensitive identification of viral pathogens. Rigorous, early, and accurate detection of viral pathogens is not only linked to preventing transmission but also to timely treatment and monitoring of drug resistance. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), the gold standard method for microbiology and virology testing, suffers from both false-negative and false-positive results arising from the detection limit, contamination of samples/templates, exponential DNA amplification, and variation of viral ribonucleic acid sequences within a single individual during the course of the infection. Rapid, sensitive, and label-free detection of SARS-CoV-2 can provide a first line of defense against the current pandemic. A promising technique is non-linear coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) microscopy, which has the ability to capture rich spatiotemporal structural and functional information at a high acquisition speed in a label-free manner from a biological system. Raman scattering is a process in which the distinctive spectral signatures associated with light-sample interaction provide information on the chemical composition of the sample. In this prospective, we briefly discuss the development and future prospects of CARS for real-time multiplexed label-free detection of SARS-CoV-2 pathogens. Coronaviruses (CoVs) are lipid-enveloped, single-stranded, positive-sense ribonucleic acid (RNA) viruses that belong to the coronaviridae family. [1] CoVs are roughly pleomorphic or spherical (80-220 nm in size) with obvious spike glycoproteins, which form a crown-like appearance under electron microscopy. [2] CoVs induce a wide spectrum of animal and human diseases. The CoV subfamily contains four genera, namely alpha-CoVs, beta-CoVs, gamma-CoVs, and delta-CoVs. Phylogenetically, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) belongs to the betacoronavirus genus. [2] The mortality rate of SAR-CoV-2 is higher than other respiratory viral infections such as Middle East respiratory syndrome-CoV (MERS-CoV). [3] The spike glycoprotein of SARS-CoV-2 binds to the angiotensinconverting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptor as a cell entry pathway; SARS-CoV-2 uniquely replicates the RNA genome via the production of a nested set of viral RNA pathogens. Replication of the viral RNA genome in airway epithelial cells triggers cell damage and chronic inflammation. [4] Like SARS-CoV, SARS-CoV-2 remains stable, specifically on plastic or stainless steel surfaces (up to days) and in aerosols (up to 3 h). [5] Airborne droplets and direct contact are thought to be major routes of SARS-CoV-2 transmission among humans. The distinct medical signs of SARS-CoV-2 include nasal congestion, persistent cough, fever with chills, breathing difficulties, and pneumonia. [5] The virus structure, metabolism, replication, maturation processes, and interaction with the host system have been schematically illustrated by Astuti et al. [3] The pathology of SARS-CoV-2 largely remains unknown; however, new data on this topic are anticipated based on ongoing intensive scientific research. Based on the novelty of the viral genome and the rapid viral replication rate, the existence of accurate and efficient diagnostic methods remains an unanswered question. The currently available diagnostic modality for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 is reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). [6] In real-time RT-PCR, amplification of target RNA is monitored with the progression of the PCR reaction. Reverse transcription is an RNA-dependent DNA polymerase, which transforms the viral genomic RNA template into complementary single-stranded DNA (cDNA). cDNA, which is more stable than RNA, serves as a template to transform the single-stranded cDNA into the double-stranded DNA. There are two kinds of cDNA synthesis primers, including non-specific sequences (hexamer or oligo-dT) and specific sequences (DNA labeled with both fluorescence and quenching agents). [7] The objective of RT-PCR is to amplify a cDNA sequence based on the RNA template. The sensitivity of the PCR process is dependent upon the primer and probe designs, RNA extraction, as well as optimization of the PCR assay. A wide range of RT-PCR assays were designed during the SARS-CoV epidemic, such as fluorescent dyes and sequence-specific primers (e.g., DNA labeled with fluorescent dyes), which generate fluorescence or electrical signals with minimal contamination of sample/template. [8] RT-PCR testing is particularly vulnerable to false-negative and false-positive results. False-negative results are generally associated with the specimen source, degradation of the nucleic acid, the detection limit, mutations in viral RNA genome, amplification inhibitors, missing fusion variants, and an inappropriate amount of organisms in the sample. [7, 9] False-positive results arise from DNA contamination in the genomic RNA, binding of primer to contaminated DNA, and non-sequencing at low temperature. [10] In China, false-negative results have been reported at rates as high as 20% to 40%, which raised serious concern over the use of RT-PCR. [11] To improve the efficacy of RT-PCR testing, a number of parameters should be taken into account, such as primer design, halflife, stability, and immunogenicity of the RNA genome, the distance between the primers and DNA polymerase, the relationship between disease severity and analyte concentration, and monitoring of mutations (and specimens) over several time points (from both the upper and lower respiratory tracts). PCR testing is generally very expensive and time consuming. RNA extraction from swab samples takes more than 4 h; more than 24 h is needed to accomplish the lengthy process of PCR testing and analysis. The advantages and limitations of other diagnostic methods for COVID-19 loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP assay) and protein testing have been reviewed elsewhere. [12] Table I summarizes currently available techniques with sample source, assay time, sensitivity, operating temperature, and limitations for the detection of SARS-COV-2. A cost-effective, point-of-care, rapid, sensitive, and multiplexed approach for label-free detection of SARS-CoV-2 in patients remains unavailable. Importantly, a combination of diagnostic tools and clinical validation can facilitate outbreak management and reduce inaccurate results. A promising solution is Raman spectroscopy. Spontaneous Raman spectroscopy (also known as linear Raman spectroscopy) is a versatile analytical method that provides spectral information about the molecular vibrational states of the chemical structure of a molecule via photon scattering. [21] Vibrational spectroscopy (both Raman and infrared) has extensively been used as a point-of-care biomedical tool for the diagnosis of human diseases, such as cancer, [22] cardiovascular disease, [23] bacterial infection, [24] fungal infection, [25] and viral [26] infections. However, the fingerprints of chemical structures of biological molecules obtained using spontaneous Raman scattering are very weak in comparison to the incident photon. Therefore, non-linear coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) was introduced to address these limitations of weak signals by manipulating enormous electromagnetic field enhancement resulting from the four-wave mixing phenomena of non-linear optics. [27] CARS has been widely exploited for biological analysis (e.g., tumor detection and biomedical imaging). We have recently reported on the use of CARS to study the antimicrobial activity of graphene-composites [28] ; our data provide compelling evidence regarding the use of this technique for the detection of viral strains. Raman spectroscopy coupled with non-linear optics has the potential to detect SARS-CoV-2; it [15, 20] Prospective Article can pave the way for rapid label-free diagnosis and continuous monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 disease. Vibrational modes of a molecule encode a wealth of structural and conformational information. Inelastic scattering of photons from matter, known as the Raman effect, is used to directly measure the molecular vibrations of a molecule with visible or near-infrared (NIR) light. [21] Raman spectroscopy is a powerful technique to identify the unique vibrational states of a biological system by measuring the change in frequency of the incident light. Most Raman scattering is measured by the Stokes shift. In spontaneous Raman scattering, 1 in 10 8 incident photons undergoes the Raman effect. [29] Therefore, it is known as incoherent Raman scattering. Furthermore, Raman imaging using the spontaneous Raman effect requires high power laser sources to image a small cross-section; as such, several hours are required to image a cell. [27] Spontaneous Raman scattering also becomes irrelevant for the measurement of molecules at very low concentrations. The weak light-matter interaction and the long exposure time limit its application in clinical settings. The polarization phenomena in spontaneous Raman scattering obeys first-order (linear) optics, which is a two-wave mixing process. [21] These challenges in spontaneous Raman microscopy have been overcome by multiphoton microscopy using an approach that is known as CARS. CARS has revolutionized the field of vibrational spectroscopy by probing vibrational coherences in biological systems in a label-free manner. CARS is a non-linear four-wave mixing process. CARS uses two synchronized pulsed light sources, a pump field, and a probe field of frequencies, ω p and ω pr , respectively, which are mixed with a third field of Stokes frequency, ω s , to coherently excite the molecules and create an anti-Stokes field of frequency ω as = ω p −ω s + ω pr . [30] The frequency of one laser is fixed; the frequency of the other is tunable such that the beat frequency (ω p −ω s ) coincides with the frequency of Raman-active vibrational modes of the sample. The use of coherent laser fields in CARS generates strong signals and enables a three-dimensional view of molecular vibrations and native fingerprints in unstained samples. [31] The energy diagrams of spontaneous Raman spectroscopy and CARS are shown in Fig. 1 . Chemically specific imaging of biological systems using CARS circumvents the problems of photobleaching (associated with fluorescence imaging), chemical perturbation (by exogenous fluorescent labels), and long excitation wavelength (in infrared imaging). [32] The spatiotemporal overlapping of pump and Stokes fields are strictly centered on the unstained molecule, resulting in a signal with a minimal excitation volume at incredibly rapid scanning rates. CARS microscopy has several advantages over traditional imaging modalities, such as high penetration depth into molecules (up to several hundred micrometers in intact samples), minimal photodamage to samples, unstained sampling, high spatiotemporal resolution, as well as label-free and chemically specific multiplexing. In 1999, Zumbusch et al. developed three-dimensional CARS with a colinear pump, Stokes pump, and near-infrared ultrashort laser system for the imaging of live cells. [33] Over the last 20 years, CARS has extensively been exploited for biomedical applications, such as the detection of lipid-based prostate circulating tumor cells, [34] tumor identification, [35] retinal changes [36] atherosclerosis, [37] the presence of pharmaceutical agents, [38] and bacterial infections. [39] Heuke et al. [40] reported on the detection and diagnosis of ex vivo non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC), specifically differentiation of healthy skin from NMSC cells using non-linear optical microscopies such as CARS microscopy as well as second harmonic generation and two-photon excited fluorescence imaging of human cancer samples. Figure 2 [40] illustrates the morphological features of NMSC detection using CARS microscopy and other imaging modalities. Figure 2 shows that the features associated with the clinical diagnosis of NMSC can efficiently be detected using CARS. CARS has also been used in virology. [41] In 2006, Nan et al. [42] used CARS to detect changes in cellular lipids associated with hepatitis C virus (HCV). They also combined two-photon fluorescence with CARS to study the subcellular internalization of HCV RNA (using non-diseased cells for RNA replication) and variations in lipid metabolism by HuH-7 hepatoma cells. Lyn et al. [43] investigated the intra-and sub-cellular internalization of HCV and the phenotype of genomic RNA in live cells after antiviral treatment using CARS. They demonstrated the efficiency of CARS to assess the impact of lovastatin on lipid metabolism and also to monitor HCV RNA replicons upon treatment. CARS microscopy is extremely sensitive to the dispersion of viral RNA genomes from primary sites as well as to chemical/structural modifications in lipid droplet size/volume. In another study, Lyn et al. [44] reported on the ability of CARS to quantify overexpression of HCV proteins and reveal alterations in lipid droplet size, density, localization, and redistribution of these proteins. CARS has been explored to detect abnormal lipid metabolism, cholesterol catabolism, and triglyceride excretion events linked to HCV RNA replication [45] ; changes in lipid phenotype [46] ; quantitative monitoring of phenotypic variations associated with lipid metabolism and storage in Caenorhabditis elegans (as a model organism for host-virus interactions) [47, 48] ; and imaging fibroblast cells infected by cytomegalovirus. [49] Recently, Scully et al. [50] used femtosecond adaptive spectroscopic methods coupled with CARS to illustrate and Prospective Article distinguish between influenza and picornavirus with enhanced sensitivity. This work also lends further credence to the diagnostic potential of CARS for viral research. Lipid droplets have been used as a biomarker for viral infections. CARS has effectively been used as a sensitive tool to study host-virus interactions, cellular membrane membranes, and lipid metabolism mechanisms; these studies have improved our understanding of metabolic disorders in viral infections. The significant role of lipid droplets in the viral lifecycle has long been appreciated. Lipids are the building blocks of viruses that play crucial biological functions in viral lifecycle activities, such as signaling, energy storage, viral replication, endocytosis, and exocytosis. [51] Importantly, it has now been recognized that viruses target lipid signaling and lipid metabolism; viruses fuse with lipid membranes during their entry into host cells, modifying the host cells to support viral envelopment, replication, and maturation. [41] Lipid metabolism is a critical target of SARS-CoV-2 in addition to the ACE2 entry pathway. [51] Several studies have revealed that lipid metabolism enzymes, such as cytosolic phospholipase A2α enzyme [52] and phospholipase A2 group IID [53] , are responsible for the viral RNA genome replication associated with SARS-CoV. The critical role of lipid-mediated pathways in host cells has also been reported for MERS [54, 55] and SARS-CoV. [56] The crucial role of lipids in metabolism, replication, and maturation of SARS-CoV-2 can be harnessed as a marker for the early detection of SARS-CoV-2. Although this approach has not been explored to this point, we suggest that CARS can potentially be used as a non-invasive diagnostic method to detect dynamic interactions between various lipid metabolism pathways and RNA replication. Label-free CARS can be used to study lipid metabolism, the levels of expression in infected cells and tissues, as well as the relationships among lipid storage, peroxidation, and desaturation. CARS can provide key insights into the impact of SARS-CoV-2 on the host cell and metabolic events in which lipids within the host cells are modified as a consequence of infection. It has also been proposed that lipid metabolism inhibitors (e.g., statins) can potentially be used to treat SARS-CoV-2. [51] The treatment of COVID-19 is beyond the scope of this Prospective; treatment strategies using a wide range of approaches, such as nanostructures and lipid inhibitors, have been discussed elsewhere. [51, 57, 58] CARS microscopy has the potential to detect SARS-CoV-2 in a label-free manner. Despite this advantage, CARS microscopy has also some limitations. For example, lipid droplets associated with COVID-positive patients may be affected by underlying conditions. Hence, the characteristic peaks of lipid droplets related to COVID-19 need to be optimized under biologically relevant conditions. Signal optimization process can be carried out by comparing CARS results with standard COVID-19 testing regimens, such as PCR, isothermal amplification, and sequencing. Changes in CARS data associated with the progression of COVID-19 disease need to be understood; it remains unclear whether the coherent Raman-active fingerprints change with the degree of infection. These limitations need to be overcome by performing CARS and surface-enhanced CARS microscopy with clinical samples. By overcoming these limitations, CARS microscopy may represent an innovative label-free molecular diagnostic method for detecting COVID-19 in a timely fashion, which has the potential to complement currently available imaging options in clinical settings. Summary and future outlook SARS-CoV-2 is a more severe human viral pathogen than other viral strains, such as MERS and SARS-CoV-1. The interplay between the lipid-enveloped viral genome and host cells can facilitate the design of innovative strategies to detect, inhibit, and monitor treatment. CARS may enable complex chemical changes that occur between the viral pathogen and the human host to be evaluated. CARS microscopy allows for the unique identification of excitation frequencies and highly sensitive three-dimensional spatiotemporal vibrational imaging of biomolecules. Capturing a myriad of spatiotemporal vibrational modes and phenotypic events of SARS-CoV-2 in real time is one promising use of this technology. To exploit this method in COVID-19 detection, appropriate samples, distinctive Raman-active fingerprints, appropriate sensitivity limit values, and correlations between CARS and the progression of the COVID-19 disease need to be determined. 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