Development of a Novel Biosensor to AccelerateInvestigations of the Gut Microbiome. - PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT
In recent years it has become clear that the human gut microbiome has significant potential to influence health,
resulting in intense research interest in areas related to human physiology, including immunology, metabolism,
neurodegenerative disease, cancer, and infectious disease. However, despite thousands of published studies
linking changes in the microbiome to disease, clinical outcomes, and therapeutic response, clinical translation
has been minimal. No FDA-approved microbiome-based therapies or drugs exist, and patients and their doctors
have no proven way to leverage their microbiome for improved health. A critical barrier preventing translation is
that most microbiome studies only analyze infrequent ‘snapshot’ measurements of the microbial gut community
and do not capture the daily variations caused by diet, medical interventions, disease states, environment, or
behavior—despite clear scientific evidence that these day-to-day variations are critical to discovery. Collection
of dense, time-longitudinal samples from trial participants is an ideal solution to this problem, but to date, there
are no existing tools for sample collection outside of collection kits, which suffer from poor patient adherence
and are too expensive to be useable for longitudinal collection. Until this is resolved, the pace of microbiome
research will remain glacial. Therefore, we have developed a prototype of a novel biosensor specifically to solve
the patient adherence and cost concerns, and thereby dramatically accelerate all microbiome research, with
significant long-term implications for human health and welfare. Our specific aims are (#1) validate the microbial
lysis function of the prototype biosensor using three key metrics: accuracy, precision, and cross-contamination,
and (#2) validate the DNA isolation function of the prototype biosensor using the same key metrics: accuracy,
precision, and cross-contamination. Upon conclusion, we will have validated the prototype, allowing us to finalize
engineering architecture and begin human trials. The contribution is significant as the components to be validated
are critical for the biosensor due to their impacts on the accuracy and robustness of the data produced as well
as their integral role in ensuring automated and low-cost functionality – given the nature of the device, both
equally necessary for successful development. The proposed project is innovative as it is supporting
development of a tool to perform complex biochemical processes in the patient home, not a laboratory, which
will result in functionality that has no remotely similar predicates available. The device will make microbiome data
collection a routine, low-cost exercise, offering a truly unique tool that is applicable to any and all research
involving human subjects, even those without direct microbiome-related hypotheses. Thus, the potential impact
of the device is significant, encompassing any novel biomarkers, diagnostics, therapeutics, or other interventions
that are discovered or confirmed using the data that will become available to researchers.