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Environmental Sensing of Heavy Metals Through Whole Cell Microbial Biosensors: A Synthetic Biology Approach

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 5, Pages 535-546

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/sb500286r

Keywords

microbial biosensors; heavy metals; environmental monitoring; risk and regulations; standard framework

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research Global [N626909-13-1-N259]
  2. ARC [LP140100459]
  3. Defence Science Institute (Synthetic Biology Initiative)
  4. Defence Science and Technology Organization

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Whole cell microbial biosensors are offering an alternative means for rapid, on-site heavy metal detection. Based in microorganisms, biosensing constructs are designed and constructed to produce both qualitative and quantitative outputs in response to heavy metal ions. Previous microbial biosensors designs are focused on single-input constructs; however, development of multiplexed systems is resulting in more flexible designs. The movement of microbial biosensors from laboratory based designs toward on-site, functioning heavy metal detectors has been hindered by the toxic nature of heavy metals, along with the lack of specificity of heavy metals promoter elements. Applying a synthetic biology approach with alternative, microbial chassis may increase the robustness of microbial biosensors and mitigate these issues. Before full applications are achieved, further consideration has to be made regarding the risk and regulations of whole cell microbial biosensor use in the environment To this end, a standard framework for future whole cell microbial biosensor design and use is proposed.

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