Transforming off-the-shelf personal glucose meter into a sustainable and decentralized label-free nucleic acid and NAAT detection platform

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Abstract

In today’s world, point-of-care nucleic acid detection still remains extensively constrained and limited by the heavy dependence on centralized urban instrumentation facilities and complex assay workflows. Here, we elucidate a glucometer-based analytical platform that enables label-free detection of nucleic acids and the nucleic acid amplification products through a simple redox-mediated mechanism. The approach leverages the potassium ferricyanide (K 3 [Fe(CN) 6 ])/ potassium ferrocyanide (K 4 [Fe(CN) 6 ]), redox system, which is intrinsic to commercial glucometers, complementing with interactions between methylene blue (MB) and nucleic acids. These interactions transduce concentration differences in nucleic acids into quantifiable electrochemical signal readouts. Distinct varied signal outputs are observed between single-stranded and double-stranded DNA, enabling the direct detection as well as integration with nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs), including polymerase chain reaction, rolling circle amplification, and loop-mediated isothermal amplification. Optimization of reaction parameters and conditions leads to enhancement of the overall signal discrimination and sensitivity across various assay formats. This innovation repurposes widely available off-the-shelf glucometers as a low-cost, portable nucleic acid detectors, thus eliminating the need for any specialized instrumentation. Our results enumerate and establish a generalized and scalable strategy for nucleic acid sensing. The platform thus supports sustainable and environmentally responsible point-of-care testing, thereby enabling improved accessibility and public health monitoring at resource-limited and remote settings.

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