Genetics Times  
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to GeneticsTimes.com RSS Feed Subscribe

Handheld DNA detector (3/11/2008)

Tags:
sequencers, sequencing

A researcher at the National University at San Diego has taken a mathematical approach to a biological problem - how to design a portable DNA detector. Writing in the International Journal of Nanotechnology, he describes a mathematical simulation to show how a new type of nanoscale transistor might be coupled to a DNA sensor system to produce a characteristic signal for specific DNA fragments in a sample.

Samuel Afuwape of the National University, in San Diego, California, explains that a portable DNA sequencer could make life easier for environmental scientists testing contaminated sites. Clinicians and medical researchers too could use it to diagnose genetic disorders and study problems in genetics. Such a sensor might also be used to spot the weapons of the bioterrorist or in criminal forensic investigations.

The earliest DNA biosensors used fluorescent labels to target DNA, but these were expensive and slow. The next generation used mediator molecules to speed up the process and labeled enzymes to make the sensors highly selective for their target molecules. None of these systems were portable, however, and the current research trend is towards systems that use no molecular labels and have avoid costly reagents.

Nevertheless, DNA biosensors are already becoming ubiquitous in many areas, but the instrumentation is usually limited to the laboratory setting. Afuwape says that a commercially viable, off-the-shelf handheld DNA biosensor that could be used in environmental, medical, forensics and other applications might be possible if researchers could unravel the basic molecular machinery operating at the interface between sample and detector.

Afuwape suggests that a new type of electronic device, the ion-selective field-effect transistor (ISFET), might be integrated into a DNA biosensor. Such a sensor would be coated with thousands of known DNA sequences that could match up - hybridize - with specific DNA fragments in a given medical or environmental sample.

The key to making the system work is that the ISFET can measure changes in conductivity. Constructing a sensor so that the process of DNA hybridization is coupled to a chemical reaction that generates electricity would produce discrete electronics signals. These signals would be picked up by the ISFET. The characteristic pattern of the signals would correspond to hybridization of a known DNA sequence on the sensor and so could reveal the presence of its counterpart DNA in the sample. Afuwape's mathematical work demonstrates that various known chemical reaction circuits involving DNA could be exploited in such a sensor.

"The ISFET is proving to be a powerful platform on which to design and develop selective, sensitive, and fast miniature DNA sensors," says Afuwape, "such portable DNA sensors will find broad application in medical, agriculture, environmental and bioweapons detection."

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Inderscience Publishers

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Genome of saltwater creature could aid understanding of gene grouping 8/21/2008

Researchers discover technology that silences genes 8/20/2008

Analysis of Lake Washington microbes shows the power of metagenomic approaches 8/20/2008

Cataloguing invisible life: Microbe genome emerges from lake sediment 8/19/2008

Synthetic Biology Is Bearing Fruit: Blockers Against Blockers 8/18/2008

Extent of inbreeding in pedigree dogs revealed in new study 8/17/2008

Obesity genes revealed 8/16/2008

DNA Markers And Economically Significant Traits In Cattle Can Be Found With New Tool 8/15/2008

DOE JGI Director Eddy Rubin highlights the genomics of plant-based biofuels in the journal Nature 8/14/2008

Maelstrom quashes jumping genes 8/13/2008

Large reservoir of mitochondrial DNA mutations identified in humans 8/12/2008

A 'next-gen' tool to view genomic data 8/5/2008

New schizophrenia genes uncovered 8/4/2008

How short RNAs influence proteins 8/3/2008

Genetic data promises new future for kiwifruit 8/3/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.