Sensor technology uses nature’s blueprint and machinery to monitor metabolism in body

Date posted
Funding Agency
(Funded by the National Institutes of Health)

Researchers from the California NanoSystems Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles, have developed a sensor technology based on natural biochemical processes that can continuously and reliably measure multiple metabolites at once. The sensors are built onto electrodes made of tiny cylinders called single-wall carbon nanotubes. These electrodes use enzymes and other molecules to perform reactions that mirror the body’s metabolic processes. Depending on the target metabolite, the sensors either detect it directly or first convert it into a detectable form through a chain of intermediary enzymatic reactions. The team measured metabolites in sweat and saliva samples from patients receiving treatment for epilepsy and detected a gut bacteria-derived metabolite in the brain that could cause neurological disorders if it accumulates.

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