Bioterrorism is becoming a major threat for many countries as a new style of war. To protect the public from such a biological attack, we need to establish improved diagnostic methods and sampling strategies in order to identify the pathogens more rapidly and precisely. We hypothesize that a smart 3-D arrayed protein nanotube chip, can diagnose a single binding event of a target pathogen in a flowed liquid by using a combination of the biological recognition functions of antibodies conjugated onto the ends of nanotubes and size discrimination such that the bound target must bridge a pre-defined nanotube-Au substrate gap to complete the circuit. Subsequently, specific confirmation of target identity will be conducted through microbiological or molecular identification steps. The target concentration will be estimated in real time by conductivity change as the target pathogen bridges the gap between the nanotube and the second electrical terminal comprising an Au substrate. This identification based on fulfilling two characteristics (presence of antigen and physical size) is an innovative method because A) A positive signal will require two parameters to be satisfied, i.e. size and antigenicity, and therefore it will reduce 'false positive signals' from cell fragments, food matrices, and environmental materials in which pathogens reside; B) it provides electrical signals in real-time; C) it is non-destructive, permitting subsequent analyses; D) it does not amplify potential biohazard; E) it can be stacked allowing flowed samples and multiple targets to be addressed; and F) it is potentially widely deployable.
Showing the most recent 10 out of 202 publications