“…However, this thermal-cycling method is time-consuming, sometimes nonspecific, and limited to a laboratory setting, which would restrict the application in resource-limited locations. To circumvent this problem, various isothermal nucleic acid amplification techniques have been developed, such as rolling circle amplification (RCA), loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), , strand displacement reaction (SDA) and catalytic hairpin assembly (CHA). , Recently, T7 in vitro RNA transcription amplification methods have found a growing interest in detecting nucleic acid targets with high amplification efficiency. ,− T7 RNA polymerase-based transcription amplification is a novel isothermal RNA amplification method that catalyzes the synthesis of the RNA fragment in a 5′–3′ direction after the recruitment of T7 RNA polymerase and a specific T7 promoter. , It is widely used in research and commercial development due to its applicability for in vitro RNA production, its high yield, and the high fidelity of the transcripts produced. , However, in most T7 RNA polymerase-dependent amplification methods, T7 RNA polymerase-based transcription reactions are designed to be combined with other amplification steps in order to improve the sensitivity, , which inevitably requires multiple primers, additional reagents, and multistep procedures. Meanwhile, due to the linear primer design, many methods exhibited insufficient specificity.…”