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Modular Biosensors

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August 21, 2025

Prelims – Current events of national and international importance| Science & Technology.

Why in News?

Recently, Researchers from Imperial College London and Zhejiang University developed genetically engineered bacteria, a step towards building cheap and programmable bioelectronic devices.

  • Biosensors – Analytical devices that consist of a combination of biological detecting elements, like a sensor system and a transducer.
  • It can be defined as self-sufficient integrated devices that can provide specific qualitative or semi-quantitative analytical information.
  • It uses a biological recognition element that is in direct spatial contact with a transduction element.
  • Whole Cell biosensors – It is analytical devices that utilize living microorganisms to detect and quantify specific biological or chemical substances.
  • It leverages the natural biological response of cells to changes in their environment, converting biochemical signals into measurable electrical signals.
  • It can maintain and repair itself & operate inside contaminated samples.
  • Issues with Traditional biosensors – It is based on enzymes, are often fragile, costly and have a slow response time in complex environments.
  • Modular biosensor – It could sense the presence of specific compounds and convert that into an electrical signal, which is compatible with low-cost electronics.
  • Source organisms – The term used genetically engineered Escherichia coli (E coli) bacteria as containers to host the biosensor modules. These microbes hosted 3 biosensor modules.
    • Sensing module – It detected a target chemical through specific molecular regulators.
    • Information Processing Module – It amplified or processed the signal.
    • Output module – It produced phenazines, nitrogen-containing organic molecules that can be measured using an electrochemical technique called voltammetry.
  • Two sensors are built by researchers
    • 1st sensors - Arabinose – A simple plant sugar often used in lab media.
    • A sample containing the sugar came in contact with the bacteria, and the cells started producing phenazine-1-carboxylic acid.
    • When this molecule touched the electrode, the latter produced a current that rose with the sugar level.
    • The signal appeared in roughly 2 hours.
    • 2nd sensor – Mercury ions – These ions are present only in trace quantities in real-world water.
    • The mercury bound with a protein called MerR, triggering the production of a polymerase that pushed the phenazine production pathway into overdrive.
    • 25 nanomoles of mercury, which is below the WHO safety limit, produced a readable current within 3 hours.
  • Logic gate—The ‘AND’ logic gate inside E. coli, produced a signal only when two specific molecules were present together.
  • It is established a proof of concept of a living, electronically integrated biosensor capable of detecting compounds in its surroundings, processing the signals, and supplying data.

Reference

The Hindu| Modular Biosensor

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tomasj 14 days

Vetenlopet presents the official home of Vetenløpet, a classic Norwegian uphill trail race. The site shares the event’s story, practical participation details, course description from vetenlopet.no Grotlesanden to Vetenplatået, past results, and atmospheric photo galleries, inviting runners and nature lovers to explore this unique community-driven challenge set among dramatic coastal landscapes of Norway.

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