DNA engineered micromotors powered by metal nanoparticles for motion based cellphone diagnostics

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Abstract

HIV-1 infection is a major health threat in both developed and developing countries. The integration of mobile health approaches and bioengineered catalytic motors can allow the development of sensitive and portable technologies for HIV-1 management. Here, we report a platform that integrates cellphone-based optical sensing, loop-mediated isothermal DNA amplification and micromotor motion for molecular detection of HIV-1. The presence of HIV-1 RNA in a sample results in the formation of large-sized amplicons that reduce the motion of motors. The change in the motors motion can be accurately measured using a cellphone system as the biomarker for target nucleic acid detection. The presented platform allows the qualitative detection of HIV-1 (n = 54) with 99.1% specificity and 94.6% sensitivity at a clinically relevant threshold value of 1000 virus particles/ml. The cellphone system has the potential to enable the development of rapid and low-cost diagnostics for viruses and other infectious diseases.

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Draz, M. S., Kochehbyoki, K. M., Vasan, A., Battalapalli, D., Sreeram, A., Kanakasabapathy, M. K., … Shafiee, H. (2018). DNA engineered micromotors powered by metal nanoparticles for motion based cellphone diagnostics. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06727-8

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