Evaluation and comparison of colorimetric outputs for yeast-based biosensors in laboratory and point-of-use settings
Journal article, 2024

Recent research has shown the potential of yeast-based biosensors (YBBs) for point-of-use detection of pathogens and target molecules in saliva, blood, and urine samples. The choice of output can greatly affect the sensitivity, dynamic range, detection time, and ease-of-use of a sensor. For visual detection without the need for additional reagents or machinery, colorimetric outputs have shown great potential. Here, we evaluated the inducible generation of prodeoxyviolacein and proviolacein as colorimetric YBB outputs and benchmarked these against lycopene. The outputs were induced via the yeast mating pathway and were compared on agar plates, in liquid culture, and on paper slips. We found that all three outputs produced comparable pigment intensity on agar plates, making them applicable for bioengineering settings. In liquid media and on paper slips, lycopene resulted in a higher intensity pigment and a decreased time-of-detection.

GPCR

biosensors

point-of-care detection

colorimetric outputs

yeast mating pathway

Author

Andrea Clausen Lind

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Florian David

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Verena Siewers

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Novo Nordisk Foundation

FEMS Microbiology Letters

0378-1097 (ISSN) 1574-6968 (eISSN)

Vol. 371 fnae034

Yeast-based biosensors for the specific and accessible detection of pathogens and antimicrobial resistance

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2019-00304), 2019-12-01 -- 2021-12-31.

Subject Categories

Industrial Biotechnology

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1093/femsle/fnae034

PubMed

38782713

More information

Latest update

6/25/2024