Wearable technologies for personalized monitoring require sensors that track biomarkers often present at low levels. Cortisol-a key stress biomarker-is present in sweat at low nanomolar concentrations. Previous wearable sensing systems are limited to analytes in the micromolar-millimolar ranges. To overcome this and other limitations, we developed a flexible field-effect transistor (FET) biosensor array that exploits a previously unreported cortisol aptamer coupled to nanometer-thin-film In2O3 FETs. Cortisol levels were determined via molecular recognition by aptamers where binding was transduced to electrical signals on FETs. The physiological relevance of cortisol as a stress biomarker was demonstrated by tracking salivary cortisol levels in participants in a Trier Social Stress Test and establishing correlations between cortisol in diurnal saliva and sweat samples. These correlations motivated the development and on-body validation of an aptamer-FET array-based smartwatch equipped with a custom, multichannel, self-referencing, and autonomous source measurement unit enabling seamless, real-time cortisol sweat sensing.
CITATION STYLE
Wang, B., Zhao, C., Wang, Z., Yang, K. A., Cheng, X., Liu, W., … Emaminejad, S. (2022). Wearable aptamer-field-effect transistor sensing system for noninvasive cortisol monitoring. Science Advances, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abk0967
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