国产精品99一区二区三_免费中文日韩_国产在线精品一区二区_日本成人手机在线

Scientists develop paper test tool to diagnose cancer, virus

Source: Xinhua| 2018-02-16 04:15:51|Editor: Chengcheng
Video PlayerClose

WASHINGTON, Feb. 15 (Xinhua) -- An American team from the Broad Institute of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has developed a paper test tool that allows people's genetic signatures to be seen in a paper strip with the naked eyes, like what is like in pregnancy tests.

The study, published on Thursday in the journal Science, is paving the way for an rapid, inexpensive and highly sensitive diagnostic tool to identify virus or cancer.

Researchers led by Zhang Feng, the core institute member at the Broad Institute, unveiled the power of tool called SHERLOCK in the study.

After dipping the paper strip into a processed sample, a line appears, indicating whether the target molecule was detected or not.

SHERLOCK, a shorthand for Specific High-sensitivity Enzymatic Reporter unLOCKing, is based on the powerful genome-editing technology CRISPR.

It can be used to detect cell-free tumor DNA in blood samples from lung cancer patients and to detect synthetic Zika and Dengue virus simultaneously, without instrumentation.

The team envisions a wide range of uses for SHERLOCK, due to its versatility in nucleic acid target detection.

"The technology demonstrates potential for many healthcare applications, including diagnosing infections in patients and detecting mutations that confer drug resistance or cause cancer, but it can also be used for industrial and agricultural applications where monitoring steps along the supply chain can reduce waste and improve safety," said Zhang.

Also, the SHERLOCK platform can be adapted to test for multiple targets. Initially, it could only detect one nucleic acid sequence at a time, but now one analysis can give fluorescent signals for up to four different targets at once.

It means that less sample is required to run through diagnostic panels.

For example, the new version of SHERLOCK can determine in a single reaction whether a sample contains Zika or dengue virus particles, which both cause similar symptoms in patients, according to the researchers.

"With the original SHERLOCK, we were detecting a single molecule in a microliter, but now we can achieve 100-fold greater sensitivity," explained co-first author Omar Abudayyeh, a MIT graduate student in Zhang's lab at Broad.

"That's especially important for applications like detecting cell-free tumor DNA in blood samples, where the concentration of your target might be extremely low," Zhang said.

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001369783151
主站蜘蛛池模板: 阳山县| 磐石市| 石狮市| 洛阳市| 波密县| 广平县| 习水县| 易门县| 绵阳市| 宜州市| 朔州市| 嫩江县| 广宁县| 唐河县| 易门县| 海阳市| 大竹县| 合作市| 平山县| 吴忠市| 新沂市| 清水河县| 灵石县| 如皋市| 唐河县| 安福县| 循化| 河北省| 南投县| 平陆县| 九江县| 中卫市| 满洲里市| 平远县| 临城县| 肃南| 雅江县| 都兰县| 紫金县| 彭阳县| 惠州市|