4.6 Article

Rapid RNase inhibitor production to enable low-cost, on-demand cell-free protein synthesis biosensor use in human body fluids

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 118, Issue 10, Pages 3973-3983

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.27874

Keywords

biosensor; body fluids; cell-free protein synthesis; RNase; RNase inhibitor

Funding

  1. National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering [3U54HL143541-02S1]

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Human body fluids contain biomarkers that are widely used for a range of medical purposes. Biosensors using CFPS have advantages for fast and accurate detection of biomarkers, but the cost of RNase inhibitors is a major expense. This study successfully produced and optimized a murine RNase Inhibitor using E. coli-lysate-based CFPS, reducing the total reagent costs of CFPS-based biosensors significantly.
Human body fluids contain biomarkers which are used extensively for prognostication, diagnosis, monitoring, and evaluation of different treatments for a variety of diseases and disorders. The application of biosensors based on cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS) offers numerous advantages including on-demand and at-home use for fast, accurate detection of a variety of biomarkers in human fluids at an affordable price. However, current CFPS-based biosensors use commercial RNase inhibitors to inhibit different RNases present in human fluids and this reagent is approximately 90% of the expense of these biosensors. Here the flexible nature of Escherichia coli-lysate-based CFPS was used for the first time to produce murine RNase Inhibitor (m-RI) and to optimize its soluble and active production by tuning reaction temperature, reaction time, reduced potential, and addition of GroEL/ES folding chaperons. Furthermore, RNase inhibition activity of m-RI with the highest activity and stability was determined against increasing amounts of three human fluids of serum, saliva, and urine (0%-100% v/v) in lyophilized CFPS reactions. To further demonstrate the utility of the CFPS-produced m-RI, a lyophilized saliva-based glutamine biosensor was demonstrated to effectively work with saliva samples. Overall, the use of CFPS-produced m-RI reduces the total reagent costs of CFPS-based biosensors used in human body fluids approximately 90%.

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