Bioelectric bacteria-powered sensor detects water contaminants in real time

Swan in contaminated water

Source: © Nenad Nedomacki/Shutterstock

Synthetic biology harnessed to detect endocrine disruptor and thiosulfate

Synthetic biology has been combined with electrical engineering to create a small bioelectric sensor that can sense water contaminants in 2-3 minutes.

The sensor is currently at the prototype stage and is not yet being produced commercially, but has already been used to detect thiosulfate, known to cause algal blooms, within 2 minutes and also the endocrine disruptor 4-hydroxytamoxifen (4-HT) within 3 minutes.

Detection methods for these environmental pollutants, and others such as nitrates and phosphates, do exist. These include mass spectrometry and other forms of biosensing, but can take a long time, require sophisticated instruments and laboratory preparation of samples.