4.6 Article

A wearable electrochemical biosensor for the monitoring of metabolites and nutrients

Journal

NATURE BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 6, Issue 11, Pages 1225-1235

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41551-022-00916-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01HL155815]
  2. Office of Naval Research [N00014-21-1-2483, N00014-21-1-2845]
  3. NASA [NNX16AO69A, 80NSSC20M0167]
  4. High Impact Pilot Research Award [T31IP1666]
  5. Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program, Caltech-City of Hope Biomedical Initiative Pilot Grant [R01RG3746]
  6. Rothenberg Innovation Initiative Program at California Institute of Technology
  7. National Science Scholarship (NSS) from the Agency of Science Technology and Research (A*STAR) Singapore

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A wearable electrochemical biosensor has been developed to continuously detect trace levels of multiple metabolites and nutrients in sweat during physical exercise and at rest, providing real-time monitoring and assessment of health risks and nutritional status.
A wearable electrochemical biosensor can continuously detect, in sweat during physical exercise and at rest, trace levels of multiple metabolites and nutrients, including all essential amino acids and vitamins. Wearable non-invasive biosensors for the continuous monitoring of metabolites in sweat can detect a few analytes at sufficiently high concentrations, typically during vigorous exercise so as to generate sufficient quantity of the biofluid. Here we report the design and performance of a wearable electrochemical biosensor for the continuous analysis, in sweat during physical exercise and at rest, of trace levels of multiple metabolites and nutrients, including all essential amino acids and vitamins. The biosensor consists of graphene electrodes that can be repeatedly regenerated in situ, functionalized with metabolite-specific antibody-like molecularly imprinted polymers and redox-active reporter nanoparticles, and integrated with modules for iontophoresis-based sweat induction, microfluidic sweat sampling, signal processing and calibration, and wireless communication. In volunteers, the biosensor enabled the real-time monitoring of the intake of amino acids and their levels during physical exercise, as well as the assessment of the risk of metabolic syndrome (by correlating amino acid levels in serum and sweat). The monitoring of metabolites for the early identification of abnormal health conditions could facilitate applications in precision nutrition.

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