A Computationally Assisted Approach for Designing Wearable Biosensors toward Non‐Invasive Personalized Molecular Analysis

Author:

Mukasa Daniel1,Wang Minqiang1,Min Jihong1,Yang Yiran1,Solomon Samuel A.1,Han Hong1,Ye Cui1,Gao Wei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Andrew and Peggy Cherng Department of Medical Engineering Division of Engineering and Applied Science California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA 91125 USA

Abstract

AbstractWearable sweat sensors have the potential to revolutionize precision medicine as they can non‐invasively collect molecular information closely associated with an individual's health status. However, the majority of clinically relevant biomarkers cannot be continuously detected in situ using existing wearable approaches. Molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) are a promising candidate to address this challenge but haven't yet gained widespread use due to their complex design and optimization process yielding variable selectivity. Here, QuantumDock is introduced, an automated computational framework for universal MIP development toward wearable applications. QuantumDock utilizes density functional theory to probe molecular interactions between monomers and the target/interferent molecules to optimize selectivity, a fundamentally limiting factor for MIP development toward wearable sensing. A molecular docking approach is employed to explore a wide range of known and unknown monomers, and to identify the optimal monomer/cross‐linker choice for subsequent MIP fabrication. Using an essential amino acid phenylalanine as the exemplar, experimental validation of QuantumDock is performed successfully using solution‐synthesized MIP nanoparticles coupled with ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy. Moreover, a QuantumDock‐optimized graphene‐based wearable device is designed that can perform autonomous sweat induction, sampling, and sensing. For the first time, wearable non‐invasive phenylalanine monitoring is demonstrated in human subjects toward personalized healthcare applications.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Heritage Medical Research Institute

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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