21 September 2010

Biosensing technology could help establish real time medical diagnosis

  • The new electronic microplate is shown in front of the technology it aims to replace, the conventional microplate

New electronic biosensing technology developed by a team of microelectronics engineers could make standard biomedical research tools and diagnostic labs a thing of the past.

Arrays of tiny test tubes, microplates have been used for decades to simultaneously test multiple samples for their responses to chemicals, living organisms or antibodies. Fluorescence or colour changes in labels associated with compounds on the plates can signal the presence of particular proteins or gene sequences.

Now researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology hope to replace these microplates with modern microelectronics technology, including disposable arrays containing thousands of electronic sensors connected to powerful signal processing circuitry. The team says that the new electronic biosensing platform could make real time disease diagnosis possible - potentially in a physician's office.

Fundamental to the new biosensing system is the ability to electronically detect markers that differentiate between healthy and diseased cells.

"We have put together several novel pieces of nanoelectronics technology to create a method for doing things in a very different way than what we have been doing," said Muhannad Bakir, associate professor in Georgia Tech's School of Electrical and Computer Engineering. "What we are creating is a new general purpose sensing platform that takes advantage of the best of nanoelectronics and three dimensional electronic system integration to modernise and add new applications to the old microplate application. This is a marriage of electronics and molecular biology."

The three-dimensional sensor arrays are fabricated using conventional low cost microelectronics technology. Although existing sample preparation and loading systems may have to be modified, the team claims that new biosensor arrays should be compatible with existing work flows in research and diagnostic labs. Ultra high density spring-like mechanically compliant connectors and advanced 'through-silicon vias' will make electrical connections while allowing technicians to replace biosensor arrays without damaging the underlying circuitry.

Separating sensing and processing portions allows fabrication to be optimised for each type of device. The sensitivity of the tiny electronic sensors can often be greater than current systems, potentially allowing diseases to be detected earlier. Because the sample wells will be substantially smaller than those of current microplates - allowing a smaller form factor - they could permit more testing to be done with a given sample volume.
The technology could also facilitate use of ligand-based sensing that recognises specific genetic sequences in DNA and provide an indication of the proteins that are being expressed by that patient.

So far, researchers have demonstrated a biosensing system with silicon nanowire sensors in a 16well device built on a 1x1cm chip. The nanowires, 50x70nm, differentiated between ovarian cancer cells and healthy ovarian epithelial cells at a variety of cell densities.

The team believes that, with enough sensors, it will one day be possible to screen for thousands of disease markers in real time.

Author
Chris Shaw

Supporting Information

Websites
http://www.gatech.edu/newsroom/release.html?nid=61055

Companies
Georgia Institute of Technology

This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.

Do you have any comments about this article?

Add your comments

Name
 
Email
 
Comments
 

Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Please view our Terms and Conditions before leaving a comment.

 

Related Articles

AMD launches R series

AMD has extended its embedded systems product range with the announcement of ...

Feabhas gets OK from ARM

Embedded training specialist Feabhas has been appointed an ARM Approved ...

New four channel a/d converter

Analog Devices has introduced a new four channel high speed a/d converter for ...

Image is everything

Medical imaging is one of the underrated miracles of modern medicine. Only a ...

Embedded Power roundtable

While power supply design is becoming increasingly important, knowledge is ...

Medical electronics challenges

A fundamental shift in the nature of healthcare delivery is seeing a host of ...

Adapting to the extremes of rugged design

Ruggedisation and reliability are key requirements for a wide range of embedded ...

The real solution to fake parts

The high tech supply chain is more vulnerable to counterfeit components than ...

Transferring Data in Non-Networked ...

Nexus (GB), the UK partner of portable data token manufacturer Datakey ...

Embedded World: Rutronik

Rutronik will be presenting application specific solutions for the lighting, ...

Non ferrous TVS arrays

Microsemi has announced the availability of two new non magnetic, 500W ...

M9 connectors

The Binder Series 702 is a range of M9 shielded connectors that the German ...

European Workshop 2012 iNEMI

12 June, 2012, Berlin, Germany

Safety in Systems of Systems

21 June 2012, The Cumberland Hotel, London, UK

ETT Medtech Summit 2012

October 16-17th 2012, Lausanne, Switzerland

Ask the Expert: Ken Nesteroff

How does TI's C66x medical imaging software tookit enable developers to better ...

TI’s New Space Saving Package

As electronics continue to permeate into new areas of automotive, medical, and ...

TI ADC for medical imaging

Look inside TI's most compact ADC for medical imaging - ADS5263 16-bit ...

Bionic lenses and rabbits

A Terminator style bionic contact lens has been developed by researchers in a ...

Bullish optoelectronic market burgeoning

New Electronics archive: June 23 1970

How will BIS fare when Government cuts come?

"My department will be the department for growth. We need to develop a ...

Rick Clemmer, ceo, NXP

Rick Clemmer believes high performance mixed signal is just one of the sectors ...

Henri Richard, Freescale

Freescale's chief sales and marketing officer tells Graham Pitcher that he's ...

Dave Bell, president, Intersil

Intersil's president updates Graham Pitcher on the company's progress in ...