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1.
TrAC Trends in Analytical Chemistry ; : 116507, 2021.
Article in English | ScienceDirect | ID: covidwho-1559776

ABSTRACT

Wastewater surveillance is a powerful tool to understand community profiling in terms of health monitoring. Tracking biomarkers such as inorganic and organic pollutants, drugs, and pathogens in wastewater gives a general idea about the lifestyle and health status of a population as well as pollutant exposure caused by various toxic chemicals. Notably, tracing pathogenic clues could help predict and prevent disease outbreaks such as the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in communities. To this end, developing portable biosensing platforms will facilitate the on-site monitoring of water contamination without requiring complex equipment. New technological developments in synthetic biology have advanced both synthetic gene circuit-based biosensors and new in vitro detection strategies coupled with easy-to-interpret visualization methods. Here, we summarize the latest advances in synthetic biology tools and discuss how they enable the development of rapid, low-cost, ease-to-use and field-deployable biosensors for monitoring a variety of water contaminants and health-related biomarkers in the environment.

2.
Adv Mater Technol ; 7(1): 2100842, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1404534

ABSTRACT

In light of the swift outspread and considerable mortality, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) necessitates a rapid screening tool and a precise diagnosis. Saliva is considered as an alternative specimen to detect the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) since the viral load is comparable to what are found in a throat and a nasal cavity. The electrical double layer (EDL)-gated field-effect transistor-based biosensor (BioFET) emerges as a promising candidate for salivary COVID-19 tests due to a high sensitivity, a portable configuration, a label-free operation, and a matrix insensitivity. In this work, the authors utilize EDL-gated BioFETs to detect complementary DNAs (cDNAs) and viral RNAs with various testing conditions such as switches of probes, temperature treatments, and matrices. The selectivity is confirmed with cDNA and noncomplementary DNA (ncDNA), exhibiting an eightfold difference in electrical signals. The matrix insensitivity is evaluated, and BioFETs successfully validate the detection of SARS-CoV-2 N-gene RNA down to 1 fm in diluted human saliva with a 95°C- and a 25°C-treatment, respectively. This proposed system has a high potential to be deployed for an on-site COVID-19 screening, improving the disease control and benefitting frontline healthcare system.

3.
IEEE Sens J ; 21(9): 10219-10230, 2021 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1105157

ABSTRACT

The coronavirus pandemic is the most challenging incident that people have faced in recent years. Despite the time-consuming and expensive conventional methods, point-of-care diagnostics have a crucial role in deterrence, timely detection, and intensive care of the disease's progress. Hence, this detrimental health emergency persuaded researchers to accelerate the development of highly-scalable diagnostic devices to control the propagation of the virus even in the least developed countries. The strategies exploited for detecting COVID-19 stem from the already designed systems for studying other maladies, particularly viral infections. The present report reviews not only the novel advances in portable diagnostic devices for recognizing COVID-19, but also the previously existing biosensors for detecting other viruses. It discusses their adaptability for identifying surface proteins, whole viruses, viral genomes, host antibodies, and other biomarkers in biological samples. The prominence of different types of biosensors such as electrochemical, optical, and electrical for detecting low viral loads have been underlined. Thus, it is anticipated that this review will assist scientists who have embarked on a competition to come up with more efficient and marketable in-situ test kits for identifying the infection even in its incubation time without sample pretreatment. Finally, a conclusion is provided to highlight the importance of such an approach for monitoring people to combat the spread of such contagious diseases.

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