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DETECTION AND
SURVEILLANCE
Sheila Grant
Department of Biological Engineering
UMC
University of Missouri
Goal
• Goal is to ensure that early and accurate
detection is available for important pathogens
and zoonotic pathogens in various
environments and deployment mechanisms
University of Missouri
Methods of Introduction
•
•
•
•
•
Aerosol release
Food supply
Water supply
Direct infection
Direct exposure from
infected people/animals
University of Missouri
How to Protect?
Biological sensors
Field RT-PCR
Syndromic surveillance
University of Missouri
Integration of Surveillance Mechanisms
Introduction of FAD
Sensors: “Detect”
Syndromic: “Increase vigilance”
Detect?
yes
no
Field PCR: “Increased surveillance”
Provisional
containment
measures
implemented
yes
Detect?
no
Laboratory
confirmation
Continue surveillance
Implement response measures
University of Missouri
Sensor Development
1. Biological detection elements and transducer
system
2. Microfabrication
3. (Aerosol collection)
4. Signal processing, transmission, and
networking
5. Modeling
University of Missouri
Biological detection element and
transducer systems
Biosensor system
Biological Detectors
Transducers
+
=
• antibodies
•optical
• peptides
•acoustic wave
• receptors
•electrochemical
bioterrorist agents
University of Missouri
FRET Immunosensor
• measures the conformational changes that occurs
when antibodies bind to select agents
• technique can eliminate false positives since only
viable agents can elicit a
conformational
change.
lo
l1
l2
DD
Protein A
University of Missouri
Sensing Peptides
Mechanical:
Shear Horizontal-SAW (SH-SAW) biosensors will detect enzymes in an aqueous
solution. This device will detect a change in wave propagation speed as the targeted
enzyme in solution cleaves a specific peptide-construct, vastly increasing
specificity.
Optical:
Additionally, labeled peptide-constructs
can be immobilized to gold nanoparticles,
which effectively quenches
fluorescence. Upon interactions with
target enzymes, the peptide is cleaved and
fluorescence is enhanced.
University of Missouri
Ring resonator toxin sensor
using fluorescence method
Au nanoparticle
SNARE
Au nanoparticles spoil Q-factor
Upconversion is inhibited
Microsphere doped
with Erbium at the surface
980 nm laser
Upon SNARE cleavage,
Au particles are released
Upconversion is possible to detect
University of Missouri
Microfabrication and Nanotechnology
Nanoporous
waveguide materials
Peristaltic
Micro-pumps
University of Missouri
Signal detection on a chip
Anodic Bonding
between
the two
substrates
Output
Reservoir
Excitation Window
Detector
Waste Chamber
Light
Micro channel
with a Liquid
guide
Light
guide
Excitation source
core waveguide
Water
PDMS
Input
Reservoir
Analyte solution
being pumped in
Meandering Type
Nanoporous
Micro-mixer
Silica
Cross Detection
Detection using
using liquid
solid core
Inline
corewave-guide
wave-guide
(LCW)
University of Missouri
Integrated Fluorescence Assay on a Chip
Detector-covered
wall
Measurement
Flowcell
LASER
Reference
Diode
D
Donor
Diode
Acceptor
Diode
F1
F2
Short light pulses are generated by the laser and directed onto the sensor
fluorophore inside the flowcell.
University of Missouri
Future directions
• Real time detection
• Centralized data based system
• Modeling
University of Missouri
Acknowledgements
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Xudong (Sherman) Fan
Frank Feng
Shubhra Gangopadhyay
Kevin Gillis
Mark Haidekker
Susan Lever
Darcy Lichlyter
Graduate Students
• Shantanu Bhattacharya
• Rosalynn Manor
• Mary Pierce (now employed by MRI)
• Lisa Boettcher
University of Missouri