Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry Imperial College London Molecular Sciences Research Hub London W12 0BZ UK
2. Institute of Chemical Biology Imperial College London Molecular Sciences Research Hub London W12 0BZ UK
3. Department of Chemical Engineering Imperial College London South Kensington London SW7 2AZ UK
4. fabriCELL Imperial College London and King's College London London W12 0BZ UK
Abstract
AbstractDermal tattoo biosensors are promising platforms for real‐time monitoring of biomarkers, with skin used as a diagnostic interface. Traditional tattoo sensors have utilized small molecules as biosensing elements. However, the rise of synthetic biology has enabled the potential employment of engineered bacteria as living analytical tools. Exploiting engineered bacterial sensors will allow for potentially more sensitive detection across a broad biomarker range, with advanced processing and sense/response functionalities using genetic circuits. Here, the interfacing of bacterial biosensors as living analytics in tattoos is shown. Engineered bacteria are encapsulated into micron‐scale hydrogel beads prepared through scalable microfluidics. These biosensors can sense both biochemical cues (model biomarkers) and biophysical cues (temperature changes, using RNA thermometers), with fluorescent readouts. By tattooing beads into skin models and confirming sensor activity post‐tattooing, our study establishes a foundation for integrating bacteria as living biosensing entities in tattoos.
Funder
UK Research and Innovation
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Medical Research Council