Engineering At-Home Dilution and Filtration Methods to Enable Paper-Based Colorimetric Biosensing in Human Blood with Cell-Free Protein Synthesis

Tyler J. Free, Brigham Young University - Provo
Ryan W. Tucker, Brigham Young University - Provo
Katelyn M. Simonson, Brigham Young University - Provo
Sydney A. Smith, Brigham Young University - Provo
Caleb M. Lindgren, Brigham Young University - Provo
William G. Pitt, Brigham Young University - Provo
Bradley C. Bundy, Brigham Young University - Provo

Abstract

Diagnostic blood tests can guide the administration of healthcare to save and improve lives. Most clinical biosensing blood tests require a trained technician and specialized equipment to process samples and interpret results, which greatly limits test accessibility. Colorimetric paper-based diagnostics have an equipment-free readout, but raw blood obscures a colorimetric response which has motivated diverse efforts to develop blood sample processing techniques. This work uses inexpensive readily-available materials to engineer user-friendly dilution and filtration methods for blood sample collection and processing to enable a proof-of-concept colorimetric biosensor that is responsive to glutamine in 50 µL blood drop samples in less than 30 min. Paper-based user-friendly blood sample collection and processing combined with CFPS biosensing technology represents important progress towards the development of at-home biosensors that could be broadly applicable to personalized healthcare.