4.6 Review

Overcoming the limitations of COVID-19 diagnostics with nanostructures, nucleic acid engineering, and additive manufacturing

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cossms.2021.100966

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19 diagnostics; Point-of-care diagnosis; Nanomaterials; Nanochemistry; Nanostructures; Nucleic acid engineering; Additive manufactured materials

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF)
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  3. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
  4. NSF RAPID [CBET 20-29215, 20-27778, 20-28431]
  5. NIH NIAAA [AA029348]
  6. NIH NIAID [AI120683, AI130562]
  7. NIH NIDCR [DE030852]
  8. Dynamic Research Enterprise for Multidisciplinary Engineering Sciences (DREMES) at Zhejiang University
  9. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign - Zhejiang University
  10. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology
  11. Foxconn Interconnect Technology
  12. PEW Latin American Fellowship
  13. Jump Applied Research through Community Health through Engineering and Simulation (ARCHES) through the Health Care Engineering Systems Center at UIUC

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The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted limitations in current infectious disease diagnosis models, but efforts are underway to develop more effective rapid tests and address cost and time barriers for new test kits. Nanomaterials and nanochemistry show promise in enabling simpler workflows, high sensitivity, and scalable manufacturing for improved virus detection.
The COVID-19 pandemic revealed fundamental limitations in the current model for infectious disease diagnosis and serology, based upon complex assay workflows, laboratory-based instrumentation, and expensive materials for managing samples and reagents. The lengthy time delays required to obtain test results, the high cost of goldstandard PCR tests, and poor sensitivity of rapid point-of-care tests contributed directly to society's inability to efficiently identify COVID-19-positive individuals for quarantine, which in turn continues to impact return to normal activities throughout the economy. Over the past year, enormous resources have been invested to develop more effective rapid tests and laboratory tests with greater throughput, yet the vast majority of engineering and chemistry approaches are merely incremental improvements to existing methods for nucleic acid amplification, lateral flow test strips, and enzymatic amplification assays for protein-based biomarkers. Meanwhile, widespread commercial availability of new test kits continues to be hampered by the cost and time required to develop single-use disposable microfluidic plastic cartridges manufactured by injection molding. Through development of novel technologies for sensitive, selective, rapid, and robust viral detection and more efficient approaches for scalable manufacturing of microfluidic devices, we can be much better prepared for future management of infectious pathogen outbreaks. Here, we describe how photonic metamaterials, graphene nanomaterials, designer DNA nanostructures, and polymers amenable to scalable additive manufacturing are being applied towards overcoming the fundamental limitations of currently dominant COVID-19 diagnostic approaches. In this paper, we review how several distinct classes of nanomaterials and nanochemistry enable simple assay workflows, high sensitivity, inexpensive instrumentation, point-of-care sample-to-answer virus diagnosis, and rapidly scaled manufacturing.

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