SBIR-STTR Award

A Paper-Based Synthetic Biology Platform for the On-Demand Testing of Water Quality
Award last edited on: 2/17/2024

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIEHS
Total Award Amount
$2,007,738
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
113
Principal Investigator
Khalid Alam

Company Information

Stemloop Inc

8657 Narragansett Avenue
Morton Grove, IL 60053
   (314) 497-1984
   info@stemloop.com
   www.stemloop.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 09
County: Cook

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43ES031899-01
Start Date: 9/9/2020    Completed: 8/31/2022
Phase I year
2020
Phase I Amount
$225,000
Safe drinking water is essential for public health, yet is increasingly threatened by anthropogenic activities and aging infrastructure that contaminate it with heavy metals and other toxins. This is especially true near Superfund and brownfield sites, where industrial activity is either known or suspected to have resulted in pollution of water sources. Most notable is the contamination of drinking water with lead and arsenic, which can result in lead poisoning and arsenicosis, respectively, and can contribute to developmental disorders, physical abnormalities, and cancer. Upon discovery, these contaminants can be mitigated by existing purification technologies. However, as recent events such as the crises in Flint, MI or Newark, NJ exemplify, the combination of improper water management and filtration failure is leading to major public health threats. Part of the solution to the challenge of safe water management is frequent water quality testing. However, reliable testing remains limited to analytical chemistry techniques that are costly, time consuming, and require substantial laboratory infrastructure and technical expertise. This complicates the large scale testing needed to address critical water management issues, and has been a large barrier for the routine testing of water supplies by consumers. Here we propose to address these issues by developing a new technology platform that will allow for the reliable, low- cost, on-site and on-demand monitoring of harmful contaminants within water supplies. Our technology is built from recent innovations in synthetic biology that allow the repurposing of natural allosteric transcription factors that can sense specific toxic ligands, such as heavy metals, and respond by activating gene expression. The use of cell-free synthetic biology reactions that support gene expression processes and visible gene expression reporters allows the assembly of "cell-free biosensors", which are in vitro reactions that can be freeze-dried for long term storage and simple distribution. Rehydration of these sensors with a water sample then activates the reaction and produces a detectable signal in the presence of a toxic compound. This Phase I proposal details a series of complementary aims for achieving improved specificity and sensitivity of this biosensing platform, in the context of detecting lead and arsenic as model target contaminants of significant health concern, and incorporating it within a convenient paper-based format suitable for consumer use. Our approach includes the development and application of bioinformatic approaches to identify naturally-occurring transcription factor homologues with improved performance characteristics, high throughput cell-free synthetic biology approaches to rapidly characterize their performance, and new manufacturing techniques to embed and test these sensors on paper-based substrates. A successful outcome of this proposal will lead to a multiplexed, paper-based device that will address the problem of reliable and affordable water quality monitoring for the contaminants lead and arsenic. This work will establish a proof-of-concept of this technology that will enable the Phase II goals of achieving user-guided product specifications in real-world water samples and manufacturing scale-up.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
Clean drinking water-free of contaminants such as the heavy metals lead and arsenic-is essential to public health, as chronic consumption of contaminants, even at low levels, can lead to myriad health issues including developmental disabilities and cancer. Currently, the only reliable methods of detecting heavy metal contaminants in water involve the collection, preservation, and transportation of water samples to analytical chemistry laboratories, which can cost upwards of hundreds of dollars and take weeks to provide results on the safety of the water sample. Here, we propose to combine cutting-edge advances in the fields of cell-free synthetic biology and paper-based microfluidics to create low-cost and easy-to-use devices for the on-site, on-demand detection of the water contaminants lead and arsenic.

Project Terms:
Aging; Antibiotics; Antibiotic Agents; Antibiotic Drugs; Miscellaneous Antibiotic; Arsenic; Biosensing Techniques; Biosensing Technics; biosensing; Malignant Neoplasms; Cancers; Malignant Tumor; malignancy; neoplasm/cancer; Cell-Free System; Cellfree System; Cells; Cell Body; Analytical Chemistry; Analytic Chemistry; Developmental Disabilities; Child Development Disorders; Engineering; Equipment; Filtration; Filtration Fractionation; Freeze Drying; Freeze Dryings; Lyophilization; Fresh Water; Freshwater; Gene Expression; Goals; Health; In Vitro; Industrialization; Ions; Laboratories; Lead; Pb element; heavy metal Pb; heavy metal lead; Lead Poisoning; Pb lead toxicity; Pb poisoning; Pb toxic effect; Pb toxicity; Pb2+ Toxicity; Pb2+ lead toxicity; Pb2+ poisoning; Pb2+ toxic effect; lead poisonings; lead toxic effect; lead toxicity; toxic effect to lead; toxicity to lead; Ligands; Literature; Metals; Methods; Mining; Paper; Pesticides; Poison; Toxic Chemical; Toxic Substance; toxic compound; Proteins; Public Health; Rehydrations; Risk; Safety; Sensitivity and Specificity; Signal Transduction; Cell Communication and Signaling; Cell Signaling; Intracellular Communication and Signaling; Signal Transduction Systems; Signaling; biological signal transduction; Specificity; Technology; Testing; Time; Toxin; transcription factor; Basal Transcription Factor; Basal transcription factor genes; General Transcription Factor Gene; General Transcription Factors; Transcription Factor Proto-Oncogene; Transcription factor genes; Transportation; Vision; Sight; visual function; Water; Hydrogen Oxide; Water Pollution; Water Supply; Work; Technical Expertise; technical skills; Businesses; Tube; base; sensor; improved; Site; Chronic; Phase; Variation; Variant; Series; Reporter Genes; Ensure; Evaluation; Failure; Individual; Deposit; Deposition; Reporter; Heavy Metals; Nature; Event; Home; Home environment; Stream; Reaction; water sampling; Source; Pattern; Techniques; interest; Performance; water quality; cell assembly; drinking water; aqueous; Municipalities; biological sensor; Biosensor; Structure; novel technologies; new technology; Devices; Modeling; Sampling; Property; response; water monitoring; water quality monitoring; water testing; developmental disorder; developmental disease; Bio-Informatics; Bioinformatics; µfluidic; Microfluidics; preventing; prevent; small molecule; GeneHomolog; Homolog; Homologue; Homologous Gene; Address; Enzymatic Reaction; Biochemical Reaction; Data; Detection; Collection; Gene Expression Process; SBIR; Small Business Innovation Research; Small Business Innovation Research Grant; Monitor; Characteristics; developmental; Development; cost; anthropogenic; anthropogenesis; Outcome; scale up; Consumption; innovate; innovative; innovation; synthetic biology; user-friendly; prototype; manufacturing scale-up; Superfund; screening; Water contamination; contaminated water; drinking water contamination; contaminated drinking water; preservation; Infrastructure; bio-informatics pipeline; bioinformatics pipeline

Phase II

Contract Number: 2R44ES031899-02
Start Date: 9/20/2022    Completed: 8/31/2024
Phase II year
2022
(last award dollars: 2023)
Phase II Amount
$1,782,738

Safe drinking water is essential for public health yet is increasingly threatened by anthropogenic activities and aging infrastructure that contaminate it with heavy metals and other toxins. Most notable in the United States is the contamination of drinking water with lead, a heavy metal that is pervasive in America's water infrastructure and indoor plumbing. Chronic exposure to lead results in numerous adverse health and societal outcomes and is an environmental injustice that widens inequalities. Upon discovery, lead contamination can be mitigated by changing drinking water source, flushing, and existing filtration technologies. However, as recent events such as the crises in Flint, MI or Newark, NJ exemplify, improper management can lead to major public health threats by creating community-wide exposure to dangerously high levels of lead. Lead contamination of drinking water is widespread across the United States due to aged infrastructure and domestic plumbing that heavily relied on lead. Frequent monitoring for the presence of lead contamination in drinking water is part of the solution. It can identify where problems exist, alert consumers without delay, and inform risk mitigation and remediation strategies. However, reliable testing remains limited to analytical chemistry techniques that are costly, time consuming, and require substantial laboratory infrastructure and technical expertise. This complicates the large- scale of testing needed to address the lead in drinking water crisis and is a barrier to the routine testing of water supplies by consumers. Here, we propose to address these issues by pursuing the next stage of development of our technology platform that will allow for the reliable, inexpensive, on-site, and on-demand monitoring of lead in drinking water. Our technology is built from recent innovations in synthetic biology that allow us to repurpose biological sensor proteins that detect specific toxic ligands, such as heavy metals, into "˜cell-free' reactions that produce detectable signals when lead is present. These biochemical reactions are safe and can be embedded on paper devices for long term storage and distribution. Adding water to these paper-based devices activates the biochemical reaction and produces a visual signal in the presence of a toxic compound. This Phase II proposal details a series of complementary aims for achieving improved specificity and sensitivity of this lead testing device, using a human-centered design process to improve test operation and results interpretation, and adapting our manufacturing and quality assurance/quality control processes for a scale-up of manufacturing capability for validation studies. A successful outcome of this proposal will lead to a rapid lead test with sensitivity comparable to laboratory testing, an accessible and easy-to-use device format with a companion mobile app, and pilot-scale production to validate our lead sensing technology in the laboratory and in the field. This work will enable manufacturing and commercial distribution of a highly sensitive and rapid lead biosensor, which will help address the growing water quality crisis in the United States and beyond.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
PROJECT NARRATIVE Clean drinking water-free of contaminants such as the heavy metal lead-is essential to public health, as chronic consumption of lead, even at low levels, can lead to myriad health issues including developmental and physical disabilities. Currently, the only reliable methods of detecting lead contaminants in water do not scale as they involve the off-site collection, preservation, and transportation of water samples to analytical chemistry laboratories, can cost upwards of hundreds of dollars, and take weeks to provide results on the safety of a single water sample. We propose to develop an inexpensive and easy-to-use device for the on-site, on- demand detection of lead in water to identify lead hazards in drinking water and ultimately reduce exposure to water contaminants.

Project Terms:
Adoption; Aging; Americas; Awareness; Biosensing Techniques; Biosensing Technics; biosensing; Cell-Free System; Cellfree System; Cells; Cell Body; Analytical Chemistry; Analytic Chemistry; Developmental Disabilities; Child Development Disorders; Communities; Dangerousness; Engineering; Environment; Eye; Eyeball; Filtration; Filtration Fractionation; Flushing; Goals; Gold; Health; Household; Interview; Investments; Laboratories; Lead; Pb element; heavy metal Pb; heavy metal lead; Ligands; Methods; Paper; Plumbing; Toxic Chemical; Toxic Substance; toxic compound; Poison; Production; Proteins; Public Health; Quality Control; diagnostic kit; test kit; Diagnostic Reagent Kits; Running; Safety; Schools; Sensitivity and Specificity; Cell Communication and Signaling; Cell Signaling; Intracellular Communication and Signaling; Signal Transduction Systems; Signaling; biological signal transduction; Signal Transduction; Technology; Testing; Time; Toxin; transcription factor; Basal Transcription Factor; Basal transcription factor genes; General Transcription Factor Gene; General Transcription Factors; Transcription Factor Proto-Oncogene; Transcription factor genes; Transportation; United States; Water; Hydrogen Oxide; Water Pollutants; water contaminant; Water Supply; Work; Zinc; Zn element; Technical Expertise; technical skills; physically handicapped; physical disability; physically disabled; base; quality assurance; improved; Procedures; Lateral; Site; Area; Chronic; Phase; Biochemical; Series; Reporter Genes; Ensure; Visual; Logistics; Inequality; Funding; Genetic; Exposure to; Companions; tool; Heavy Metals; Life; Event; Reaction; water sampling; microorganism; Source; Techniques; System; interest; field based data; field learning; field test; field study; Performance; success; water quality; hazard; drinking water; biological sensor; Biosensor; validation studies; Devices; Position; Positioning Attribute; Sampling; response; cross reactivity; water testing; water monitoring; water quality monitoring; GeneHomolog; Homolog; Homologue; Homologous Gene; Address; Microfluidic Device; Microfluidic Lab-On-A-Chip; microfluidic chip; Microfluidic Microchips; Enzymatic Reaction; Biochemical Reaction; Contractor; Detection; Diagnostic Sensitivity; Collection; Validation; technology validation; technology implementation; Monitor; Characteristics; Molecular; Process; Shipping; Development; developmental; Instruction; cost; design; designing; lead exposure; Exposure to Pb2+; Pb exposed; Pb exposure; Pb2+ Exposure; Pb2+ exposed; exposed to lead; exposure to Pb; exposure to lead; lead exposed; chronic Pb exposure; chronic exposure to lead; chronic lead exposure; lead contamination; Pb contaminated; Pb contamination; Pb2+ contaminated; Pb2+ contamination; contaminated to lead; contamination to lead; lead contaminated; anthropogenesis; anthropogenic; remediation; Outcome; scale up; aged; Consumption; innovation; innovate; innovative; synthetic biology; usability; prototype; manufacturing scale-up; risk mitigation; operation; screening; mobile application; mobile app; mobile device application; Lead levels; Pb levels; lead level; level of lead; contaminated drinking water; drinking water contamination; sensor technology; sensing technology; preservation; Infrastructure; Visualization; home test; home-based test; human centered design