David T.
Evans
,
Dalton J.
Nelson
,
Megan E.
Pask
and
Frederick R.
Haselton
*
Department of Biomedical Engineering, 5824 Stevenson Center, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37232, USA. E-mail: rick.haselton@vanderbilt.edu
First published on 25th August 2023
Exhaled biologic material is the source for the spread of many respiratory tract infections. To avoid the high-level of biosafety required to manage dangerous pathogens, we developed a safer framework using the endogenous surrogate targets RNase P and Streptococcus mitis as a means to sample exhaled biologics. Our exhalation collection scheme uses nanoscale fibrous poly(vinyl alcohol) substrates as facemask inserts. After a period of breathing or speaking, the inserts are removed and dissolved. RNase P RNA and S. mitis DNA are extracted for quantification by multiplexed RT-qPCR. Both surrogate biomarkers were detected in all samples obtained during breathing for at least five minutes or speaking for one minute. Phrases repeated 30 times had the most copies with 375 ± 247 of S. mitis and 54 ± 33 of RNase P. When the phrases were repeated just 5 times, the S. mitis copies collected were still detectable but at a significantly lower level of 11 ± 5 for S. mitis and 12 ± 9 for RNase P. These results demonstrate a collection and quantification framework that can be readily adapted to further characterize the exhalation of nanoscale biologic materials from healthy individuals, explore new collection designs safely, and serve as a method to incorporate sample controls for future pathogen exhalation studies.
An ideal framework requires four essential components: safer targets, simple collection systems that work with all masks, basic reproducible respiratory maneuvers, and a highly sensitive detection scheme for DNA and RNA biomarkers of exhaled biologics. S. mitis and RNase P are two promising safer exhalation surrogates for bacterial and viral pathogens, respectively. S. mitis is a commensal bacteria abundantly present in the respiratory tract.8–10 It has previously been shown that exhaled breath from healthy volunteers carries microorganisms from the respiratory tract, thus indicating S. mitis has the potential to be collected in exhaled breath.11 A benign respiratory viral RNA endogenous to all humans would be ideal as a surrogate viral pathogen. Potential candidates include Epstein–Barr virus and Cytomegalovirus, however, both are DNA viruses and neither one is common to a high percentage of the population. Instead, we used RNA that encodes for the human RNase P enzyme as an RNA biomarker since it is present in all human cells. Furthermore, it is commonly used as a human sample control in PCR detection assays.12,13 The endogenous nature of both targets in almost all humans opens the volunteer pool to healthy candidates for a given study by avoiding limiting participants to only patients diagnosed with the disease.
A simple collection method is also needed, and in this framework, we used electrospun poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) inserts in a facemask. PVA is a well characterized polymer widely used for biomedical applications due to its tailorable properties and biocompatibility.14–17 The nanosized fibers produced by electrospinning form a fine, porous substrate to collect biologic materials with natural respiratory maneuvers, namely, exhaled breath or speech. The unmodified PVA fibers produce a high surface area to volume ratio which allows for collection of exhaled biologics by entrapment within the porous substrate and physisorption to the polymeric fibers.18–22 The solubility of nanoscale PVA fibers in water is an additional property that can be tuned to integrate with highly sensitive standard sample preparation and RT-qPCR methods available in well-equipped laboratories. These properties allow quantitative analysis of multiple target nucleic acid sequences in a sample even when very few copies are present. Annealing the PVA electrospun substrates with heat has been shown to increase the crystallinity of the polymeric structure thus decreasing the solubility to varying degrees based on time and temperature.23 After collection, mask inserts are processed to extract DNA or RNA and then RT-qPCR is used to quantify the collected endogenous surrogates (Fig. 1). The properties of PVA, namely non-toxic, ease of manufacturing in a high surface to area to volume form, adjustable water solubility, and compatibility with PCR, make it an excellent material for use in a respiratory collection system.
To demonstrate the utility of this framework, we recruited healthy volunteers to provide respiratory samples and sought to answer four basic questions: (1) Are S. mitis and RNase P biomarkers detectable from exhaled breath? (2) What is the simplest respiratory maneuver needed to detect exhaled materials? (3) How long must a mask be worn to quantitatively detect exhaled material? (4) Is a surgical or N95 mask more effective for quantification of exhaled materials?
According to the methods used by Wong, et al., the electrospun PVA was annealed by heating for 2 hours to provide stability for the humid mask environment. Annealing at too high a temperature crystallizes the polymer to a point where it can no longer be dissolved during the later extraction steps.23 The electrospun PVA sheets were annealed at 85 °C or 120 °C under vacuum for 2 hours to test which would produce properly stable and soluble substrates. Once cooled, the PVA substrates were cut into 1′′ × 1′′ squares to fit two inserts contralaterally in two common facemask types, surgical and N95 (Fig. S1†). To test stability, inserts were worn inside a facemask and breathed through while wearing for 30 minutes as a realistic replicate environment of what the inserts will be exposed to during collection periods. Subsequently, they were processed in the same way as the first step of the extraction protocol (outlined below) by dissolving in 560 μL of buffer AVL (Qiagen #19073) to test solubility.
The RNase P primer and probe sequences from the CDC kits are as follows: forward primer – 5′-AGA TTT GGA CCT GCG AGC G-3′, reverse primer – 5′-GAG CGG CTG TCT CCA CAA G-3′, probe: 5′-(FAM)TTC TGA CCT(TAO) GAA GGC TCT GCG CG (IAbRQSp)-3′. The S. mitis primers and probe were designed based on sequences from a prior study with one modification of a mixed base ‘S’ to detect two strains.24 This modification was based on amplicon mapping to the bacterial genome GenBank® [AJ582646.1] because the mixed base primer showed the best results in preliminary PCR testing (data not shown). The sequences are as follows: forward primer – 5′-GCC ATT GAA GCS GTT ACT TTG-3′, reverse primer – 5′-CAT CCG ACA TTA ACG CAA GTT C-3′, probe – 5′-(HEX)ATG ATT GAG (ZEN)CGT GGA ACG GTG GGT(IABkFQ)-3′.
The samples were incubated at 55 °C for 15 minutes for the reverse transcription step. This was followed by a 2-minute denaturing step at 95 °C. Finally, the samples were cycled through melting and annealing/extending steps 45 times at 95 °C for 10 seconds and 60 °C for 40 seconds respectively. Fluorescence measurements were taken on the green (470/510 nm) and yellow (530/555 nm) channels.
“We will beat the coronavirus…
…sing a song of six pence…
…Peter Piper picked a peck.”
These phrases were selected based on a previous study that analyzed the airflow patterns produced while speaking plosives that produce directed transport in the form of approximately conical turbulent jets.25 The non-speaking individuals were asked to wear the mask for 5 or 30 minutes while simply breathing. Each volunteer was asked to complete their tasks twice, once while wearing a N95 mask (3 M) and once while wearing a surgical mask (Eco Pack). Upon completion, each mask insert was dissolved in a separate 560 μL aliquot of buffer AVL, left to incubate at room temperature for 10 minutes, and then stored at 4–8 °C. Any unexpected respiratory events such as sneezing, coughing, and unplanned speech were recorded, however none occurred of significant consideration. Finally, each volunteer provided a saliva sample to serve as an oral cavity reference value.
When not annealed, the electrospun PVA shrinks by approximately 70% after being worn for 30 minutes in a humid mask environment (Fig. 3). When annealed at 120 °C, the insert withstands the humid environment and no noticeable shrinkage occurs, however, the insert is no longer soluble for DNA and RNA extraction. When the electrospun PVA is annealed at a lower temperature of 85 °C, shrinkage is minimized to 15% and dissolves with no issues similar to when no annealing occurs.
Saliva samples were taken from each volunteer along with their exhaled breath samples. Fig. 7 and Fig. S2† shows the relationship between the copies detected in the saliva samples and the mask samples for each volunteer. While each individual point is one volunteer sample, groups of the same collection parameter are connected with a line based on mask type, speaking, or breathing, and collection time (5 and 10 minutes for breathing or 5× or 10× for speaking).
Fig. 7 Comparison of RNase P (A & C) and S. mitis (B & D) copies detected in saliva vs. mask type. Plots A & B are of the 30 minutes breathing samples and plots C & D are of the 30× speaking samples. Each point is a different individual and trend lines are grouped by mask type with the hollow points and dashed lines representing surgical masks and the solid points and lines representing N95 masks. See Fig. S2† for 5 minutes and 5× phrases data. |
Processing the worn mask inserts yielded 50 μL of extracted RNA and DNA biomarkers. Of this extract, 4 μL was used in the 20 μL PCR reaction. Therefore, the actual number of copies collected on a mask insert is 12.5× the number detected in the corresponding PCR reaction. The number of RNase P and S. mitis copies detected in the PCR reactions is reported in Fig. 8 separating them out based on each parameter: breathing vs. speaking, time worn or number of spoken phrases, and mask type. Breath samples show no statistical difference between 5 minutes and 30 minutes of collection time for either target. The controlled speech samples show a statistical difference for both RNase P and S. mitis between the 5 and 30 repeated phrases with a clear increase in copies collected when the phrases were spoken more times. For breathing samples, after normalizing the results to the number of copies detected in saliva for a given individual, only the S. mitis target collection in an N95 mask was significantly different between collection times. After normalizing the speaking samples to the saliva samples, no significant differences were observed.
Data collected from volunteer exhaled breath and controlled speech samples suggests RNase P and S. mitis are omnipresent endogenous targets that produce detectable levels in short collection times (Fig. 6). These results indicate they can be used as surrogates for respiratory pathogens when conducting studies to characterize exhaled biologic materials without the concerns required to test for infectious agents. Another potential application of these surrogates is to serve as controls to ensure sufficient sample is provided from exhaled breath collection and further used as a baseline to confirm that all downstream processes, such as PCR sample preparation, are working appropriately. While we assumed that saliva would be a successful normalization method, it is noteworthy that we did not find a correlation between targets collected on the mask inserts and targets detected in saliva samples from the same individual. Future studies incorporating biomarker targets characteristic of different regions of the respiratory tract might help clarify these results. Speaking and breathing may produce droplets collected on the mask inserts from regions of the respiratory tract, such as the oropharynx, that vary in target concentration compared to the regions that produced the saliva samples, such as the oral cavity. This could be an explanation for outliers produced in the expected positive trends when normalizing samples to the individual's saliva (Fig. 7 & Fig. S2†). Variance could also occur by different breathing rates or the force with which the subject is speaking. The goal of this study was to identify a target that could work reproducibly; however, future studies may use other targets. For example, one of the other 756 identified bacterial species across the upper and lower respiratory tracts could be chosen based on prevalence in different regions of interest.8
After selecting a proper molecular weight and degrees of hydrolysis along with processing steps including electrospinning and annealing, PVA proved to be an excellent collection platform. PVA is a polymer commonly used for biomedical applications because it has been well-characterized, is biocompatible and non-toxic, and can be tailored to varying levels of strength and water solubility.14–23 Furthermore, it has been widely used for electrospinning applications to produce nanofiber, porous substrates ideal for collecting small particles.28 The inserts handled well during collection and were easily dissolved to maximize extraction of the RNA and DNA biomarkers (Fig. 3). Other collection substrates could be used such as gelatin filters, which can be purchased,5,6 or media-based samplers for preserving live microorganisms.2
For the volunteer pool tested, all the parameters produced a detectable level of both RNase P and S. mitis target (Fig. 6). When comparing the difference in collected target for the 5× vs. 30× speech patterns, statistically different results were observed (Fig. 8). As expected, the greater amount of speech deposited significantly more detectable S. mitis and RNase P. The breathing samples were not statistically different based on the length of collection time for either target (Fig. 8). This could be attributed to factors such as shearing off loosely collected biologic material during inhalation or degradation of the target by nucleases on the insert over longer collection times before it was preserved in a buffer solution. The differences in breathing and speaking samples can potentially be attributed to the oropharynx for speech and the tongue or teeth for breathing. Further origin of expelled biologic materials such as the vocal cord or testing of expelled biologic material based on respiratory maneuvers such as coughing, sneezing, or singing could provide additional useful insights.
Since there can be different availabilities of mask types or preference among users, we compared surgical masks to N95 masks under the same conditions. None of the parameters showed a significant difference in the amount of target collected for either surrogate. This indicates both mask types are suitable to use for the model system based on the parameters we tested and should not otherwise affect the results. Other collection schemes, such as cloth masks or no mask at all could be explored in future studies.
The PCR measurement of exhaled material is a product of the collection efficiency (the fraction of the total exhaled targets collected on the mask inserts) and the extraction efficiency (the fraction of the total target recovered from the PVA inserts). There are three places that target loss occurs which could indicate the number of copies exhaled is actually higher than what was detected. The 1′′ × 1′′ mask inserts take up less than 12% of the target area inside the mask, therefore, they only collect a portion of what is actually expelled which would indicate a low collection efficiency. In this study we only sampled a small area of total potential collection area to minimize the working volume required to dissolve the PVA, to reduce the amount of reagents used, and to retain the natural airflow within a mask. Our biomarker extraction procedures yielded a modest 20–30% extraction efficiency, indicating a large share of the DNA collected is lost during the nucleic acid extraction from PVA (Fig. 5). We expect the RNase P RNA extraction efficiency is lower than S. mitis DNA extraction due to difficulties dealing with RNA such as molecular instability and the presence of RNases in saliva and on the insert which degrade RNA (Fig. S3†). Future studies could explore the use of biosafe RNase inhibitors to prevent such degradation. Finally, the reported copies detected are from the portion of sample used in the PCR reaction which is just 8% of the volume available after the extraction procedure. PCR volume modifications could be explored to incorporate more sample into a reaction. When accounting for all three types of loss, the number of detected copies is less than 1% of what is exhaled. Therefore, these results should not be interpreted as the full expelled biologic content. Instead, they can be used relatively to compare samples and are features that could be further optimized to increase the detection signals. Additional development of the collection material itself could investigate the inclusion of polymer surface modifications that bind exhaled biologics to further increase collection efficiency.
There was no significant decrease in extraction efficiency from the mask insert compared to directly extracting the targets from solution (Fig. 5). This indicates the PVA inserts do not hinder the extraction process but the extraction itself has a low efficiency; however, the high analytical performance of the detection assay helps to compensate. The primers and probes designed to detect S. mitis are effective down to a single copy in a 20 μL reaction volume when combined with a CDC detection kit for RNase P, even when undergoing a 15-minute reverse transcription step at 55 °C intended for the RNA samples (Fig. 4). Furthermore, RNase P maintained sufficient detection performance in the multiplexed reaction. While one of the S. mitis 101 samples did not detect any target, we believe this is an outlier since all the 100 copies were successfully detected. When 105 copies of the opposite target were spiked into a sample, detection was still successful implying the reaction components do not get fully consumed by a high concentration of the opposing target.
Since we followed standard RT-qPCR designs, this nucleic acid detection method can be easily adapted to almost any target by switching out the primer and probe sequences, although a multiplex screening would be required if more than one target is used. For this multiplexed PCR assay, the high analytical sensitivity allows for very few copies of target to be detected giving flexibility in the collection and extraction methods. However, the geometric efficiencies, as described by the slope of the analytical sensitivity log-linear fits (Fig. 4), exceeds 100% in our detection platform with 135% for RNase P and 106% for S. mitis.29 Likely, this is due to non-specific amplification of primer dimers or secondary products due to the multiplexed nature of the reaction.30 However, amplification rarely occurred without the presence of the target of interest, therefore, this low-level non-specific amplification does not affect the results of the detection platform. Furthermore, this efficiency measurement has been shown not to be fully optimal and an overestimate in some cases of highly reproducible studies.31–33
While this framework shows great potential, there were several unexpected observations. First, we expected to detect increased copies with increased time worn for both breathing and speaking samples. The lack of increased target collected with increased time worn while breathing may indicate some imperfection in the system. Second, we expected to see increased exhaled target produced by individuals with more target in saliva. Though we did show that among individuals, the amount of target varies greatly in saliva samples (Fig. 7 & Fig. S2†), this did not successfully normalize the data as expected (Fig. 8). This suggests that what is exhaled may be representative of other regions of the respiratory tract rather than just oral saliva.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3nr01859h |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |