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Sandia
Researchers To Develop Portable Microfluidic Platform For Rapid
Detection Of Biotoxins
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Sandia
biochemist Dan Throckmorton prepares to add a sample to the
prototype diagnostic device. After Dan adds the sample,
computer-controlled electronics direct a series of sample
analysis steps. Laser-induced fluorescence is used for highly
sensitive detection of assay products. The final diagnostic
device will feature a miniaturized, portable fluorescence
detector.
Credit:
Dino Vournas
Of all the threat scenarios
facing emergency responders around the country, the release and
spread of a dangerous biotoxin in a large public space is one of
the most troubling.
The reason is simple. Though
early diagnosis of biotoxin exposure is important for consequence
mitigation and the key to saving lives, no current method exists
for the quick, efficient detection of such poisonous agents.
That could all change one day
soon, as researchers at Sandia National Laboratories in
California have secured funding from the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) to design and engineer a
small, portable microfluidic device that will offer rapid
detection of biotoxin exposure in humans. In addition to speed,
the device promises to offer high sensitivity, the capability to
detect both presymptomatic and symptomatic markers, and
ease-of-use.
The NIAID, part of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), has committed $3.2 million to the
five-year project.
The effort is being undertaken
in collaboration with Prof. B.R. Singh at the University of
Massachusetts at Dartmouth and Steve Binder at Bio-Rad
Laboratories.
Sandia is a National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA) laboratory.
Device
designed for point-of-care and point-of-incident settings Instead
of sending those suspected of being infected with a biotoxin –
spectators at a sporting event who have been contaminated by a
terrorist release, for example – to a medical facility
where lab results could take days or weeks, Sandia’s Anup
Singh says a lightweight, portable device would allow on-site
emergency personnel to draw blood samples and make a rapid
determination as to the degree of exposure. Those in need of
treatment can then be monitored, and countermeasures can be
immediately executed at the facility to mitigate further damage.
“It could be a fireman, a
paramedic, or simply a primary care practitioner who might use
this device one day,” says Singh, a chemical engineer at
Sandia who will serve as the project’s principal
investigator. The only stipulation, he says, is that the device’s
end user will need to be authorized and trained in drawing blood,
though that could change eventually. “In the not-so-distant
future, a more accessible and readily available specimen such as
saliva might be able to diagnose toxins,” he says.
Currently, says Singh, the
technology to quickly test individuals for biotoxin exposure does
not exist. Those suspected of being intoxicated must give blood
samples at a medical facility and wait for laboratory analysis.
Singh says those toxins able to
be detected by the device will include botulinum toxin, SEB
(Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B), shiga toxins, Clostridium
perfringens epsilon toxin,and others.
Builds
upon success of saliva-based diagnostics project The
Sandia-led project – which will include collaborations with
the University of Massachusetts and Bio-Rad Laboratories –
builds upon the success of the lab’s well-known “spit
project,” a program also funded by the NIH. That project
could allow dentists to one day quickly test patients for gum
disease and other afflictions via saliva samples.
Anson Hatch, a Sandia
bioengineer and a microfluidic expert, will lead the microfluidic
assay development effort. The system will incorporate
microfluidic methods developed by Hatch and others at Sandia that
facilitate hands-free analysis by integrating sample pretreatment
with electrophoretic immunoassays that quickly measure analyte
concentrations in blood. The self-contained device will consist
of miniaturized electronics, optical elements, fluid-handling
components, data acquisition software, and a user interface.
The technology, device, and
methods, says Singh, can also be extended to detection of
biomarkers of other systemic diseases and conditions such as
cancer and cardiovascular disease.
Source:
Sandia National Laboratories
Time
Stamp: 9/26/2007 at 12:08:41 PM CST

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