Diarrheal disease is the second-leading
cause of death in children under five years old — killing as many as
1.5 million children worldwide every year; these startling statistics
from the World Health Organization (2009) point to the reason why a
group of undergraduate students from Arizona State University is working
to develop a low-cost biosensor — a simple device that would detect
contaminated drinking water
Diarrheal disease is the second-leading cause of death in
children under five years old — killing as many as 1.5 million children
worldwide every year. These startling statistics from the World Health
Organization (2009) point to the reason why a group of undergraduate
students from Arizona State University is working to develop a low-cost
biosensor — a simple device that would detect contaminated
drinking water.
An Arizona State University release reports that an interdisciplinary team of nine students is participating in the 2012 International Genetically Engineered Machine
(iGEM) competition — a prestigious global event that challenges
students to design and build simple biological systems made from
standard, interchangeable parts.
The ASU team started its research during
the summer to prepare for the synthetic biology competition. Its goal is
to create a user-friendly, DNA-based biosensor that can detect major pathogens. The low-cost device would be used in the field rather than in a laboratory.
“We are developing a biosensor that will detect pathogenic bacteria,
such as Shigella, Salmonella and E. coli, that cause diarrhea,” said
Ryan Muller, an undergraduate student in ASU’s School of Life Sciences
and an iGEM team leader. “Ideally, you would use our biosensor to check
different water supplies in third world-countries to determine whether
the water is safe to drink.”
The team is working on two biosensor designs.
“The first one targets DNA,” explained
Nisarg Patel, a molecular biosciences and biotechnology major in School
of Life Sciences, as well as a political science major. “Since each type
of pathogen has different DNA, we want to create complementary sequences — sequences that match a specific DNA. We will take bacterial samples from the water, pull out the DNA and check whether it complements our DNA probe. If it does, it will produce a color response and then we’ll know that the water is contaminated.”
Made for portability, Patel said the second design tests the
membranes of bacteria. When using the device to test water, if certain
proteins attach to a bacterial membrane, the sample will turn blue —
indicating the water is contaminated with a pathogen and would not be
safe to drink.
“The advantage of this design over previous
designs in the field lies in the cheap production of probes and the
enzymatic chain reaction,” said Abhinav Markus, a biomedical engineering
student in ASU’s Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering. “Samples can be tested in the field with minimal cost and high sensitivity.”
The release notes that when the ASU iGEM team first met this summer, Madeline Sands, an anthropology major in the university’s School of Human Evolution and Social Change, pitched the idea to build a low-cost biosensor. Sands previously traveled to Guatemala as part of an ASU
field experience. There, she conducted community health research under
the direction of Jonathan Maupin, a medical anthropologist. Sands
realized that contaminated water presents a serious health problem for
developing countries.
“With constant earthquakes, landslides and rains in Guatemala, it can
often be difficult to determine if a water source is contaminated,”
said Sands. “My time there made it clear that having a way to detect
contaminated water could lead to a further reduction in the incidence
and morbidity of diarrhea.”
In October, the team will present its device during the iGEM regional
competition at Stanford University. If successful, they will move on to
the global competition in November at Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
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