Biosensor sniffs out toxins

Temple University School of Medicine researchers have developed a new biosensor that sniffs out explosives and could one day be used to detect landmines and deadly agents, such as sarin gas.

To create the biosensor, Danny Dhanasekaran and colleagues genetically engineered a yeast strain with olfactory signalling machinery from a rat and genetically linked it to the expression of green fluorescent protein. They then cloned individual rat olfactory receptors into these yeast cells. When the olfactory receptor ‘smells’ the odour of DNT, an ingredient in the explosive TNT, the biosensor turns fluorescent green. The research team is the first to identify, clone and sequence this novel olfactory receptor.

‘We suspected that harnessing the potential of the olfactory system, which can detect innumerable chemical agents with unparalleled sensitivity and selectivity, would be of immense value in the detection of environmental toxins and chemical warfare agents even at sub-lethal levels,’ said Dhanasekaran, Associate Professor of Biochemistry at Temple’s Fels Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Biology.

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