Scientists Develop a Simple Way to Detect Diseases in Mosquitoes

Sandia’s QUASR enables speedy, accurate detection of West Nile and other viruses.

Written bySandia National Laboratories
| 4 min read
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LIVERMORE, Calif. — Mosquitoes are deadly efficient at spreading disease. Despite vaccines and efforts to eradicate the pesky insects, they continue to infect humans with feared diseases like Zika virus, malaria, and West Nile virus.

Gaining the upper hand on mosquitoes requires speed. Their life cycle is typically two weeks or less and they need only warm weather and standing water to breed.

Robert Meagher, a chemical engineer at Sandia National Laboratories, has developed a simple technique for simultaneously detecting RNA from West Nile and chikungunya virus in samples from mosquitoes. He is now working to add the ability to screen for Zika virus.

“Our ultimate goal is to develop an autonomous device to passively monitor for mosquito-borne diseases,” Meagher explained. “But first you need an assay that is more robust than the gold standard in a laboratory and that has a very low false-positive rate.”

Brighter than the sun

Meagher and Sandia colleagues Yooli Light, Chung-Yan Koh, and postdoctoral researcher Cameron Ball describe the technique in a paper published online in Analytical Chemistry, “Quenching of unincorporated amplification signal reporters (QUASR) in RT-LAMP enables bright, single-step, closed-tube, and multiplexed detection of RNA viruses.”

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