Pots of gold engineered to help with early disease detection

25 August 2020

            

University of Queensland researchers have developed biosensors that use nanoengineered porous gold which more effectively detect early signs of disease, improving patient outcomes.

Most diagnostic methods use costly materials and are time-consuming and expensive to run, but AIBN PhD candidate Mostafa Masud and research supervisors Professor Yusuke Yamauchi from AIBN and Dr MD Shahriar Hossain from the School of Mechanical and Mining Engineering have developed a cheaper, faster and ultrasensitive biosensor for point-of-care testing.

Mr Masud said the most exciting thing about the project was that it broke through some of the current limitations associated with early detection of diseases.

“This new diagnostic technique allows for direct detection of disease-specific miRNA, which wasn’t previously possible,” Mr Masud said.

“This is especially important for patients at an early stage of a disease such as cancer, who do not have detectable amounts of other biomarkers, but may have a detectable quantity of exosomal miRNA biomarker.

The platform was nanoengineered by the team to read samples of blood, urine, saliva or plasma through a surface covered in a gold film, which has millions of tiny pores.

From left to right:  Dr MD Shahriar Hossain, PhD Candidate Mostafa Masud and Professor Yusuke Yamauchi

The method used to create these highly-engineered porous films has been published in the prestigious science journal Nature Protocols following 15 years of research, ushering in a new era of opportunity for nanoporous materials research and technology development.

The team is continuing to develop this platform, and plans for it to be available to medical practitioners in the next five years.

“Doctors will be able to use our platform to take a small fluid sample from a patient and test for diseases instantly, for around one-quarter of the cost of other diagnostic techniques,” Professor Yamauchi said.

The researchers said the technology would be easy to use and particularly useful in remote locations and developing countries where rapid and early diagnostics were critical, especially in the case of viral infections. 

This research was funded as an Australian Research Council Discovery Project and published in the journals, Biosensor and Bioelectronics and Chemical Society Reviews.

Image above left: Dr MD Shahriar Hossain, Mostafa Masud, Professor Yusuke Yamauchi

Media: UQ Communications, Genevieve Worrell, g.worrell@uq.edu.au, +61 408 432 213.

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