New smartphone-based device can help detect Zika

Press Trust of India  |  Boston 

Scientists have developed a tiny device that can help diagnose Zika at home using a smartphone, a technology that may help prevent the risk of in newborns.

is a rare condition in which a baby is born with a and an underdeveloped brain. One baby in several thousand is born with the condition.

The tool, described in the journal Nano, could provide home testing for couples who are trying to conceive, particularly in locations with high risk of

"Zika diagnostics represent an urgent need in many parts of the world. Our goal is to address this unmet clinical need using cell-phone-based technology," said Hadi Shafiee, at the Brigham and (BWH) in the US.

"Cellphones have the power to perform complicated analyses, handle image processing, take high quality images, and are ubiquitous in Zika-afflicted countries. We can leverage this to address outbreaks of infectious disease," said Shafiee.

Traditional virus diagnostics rely on detecting in a person's bloodstream that target Zika. However, many closely related viruses, including dengue, can elicit similar antibodies, leading to a high false positive rate for such tests.

Researchers are developing a way to detect intact copies of the They developed tiny platinum nanomotors that target Zika as well as microbeads that bind the virus.

When both components are added to a sample containing Zika, they form a three-dimensional complex that moves in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. This movement can be detected using a hooked up to a USD 5

The technology can differentiate between the and other closely related viruses through the uniqueness of motion signal.

The three-dimensional moves rapidly while other non-target viruses will cause slower motion that can be easily excluded by the cellphone system for very specific detection.

This motion mechanism overcomes the cross reactivity in antibody-based detection and the complexity of nucleic acid-based detections.

This approach - known as the nanomotor-based bead-motion cellphone (NBC) system - detected Zika in samples with viral concentrations as low as 1 particle per microlitre.

The team also found that the system was highly specific - in the presence of other viruses, it accurately detected Zika.

"The system has the potential to be used at the point of care for detection in both developed and developing countries," said Mohamed Shehata Draz, an instructor in the BWH.

"This is an important way to eliminate the social stress related to and problems specifically related to newborns," Draz said.

The current study uses an similar to what Shafiee and colleagues used previously to detect in semen samples. Unlike viruses, semen can be detected without nanoparticles and complexes.

The work highlights the potential of using for viral diagnostics, and researchers plan to further explore and apply the approach to other viruses.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, July 02 2018. 16:05 IST