Self-Healing Electronics for Prognostic Monitoring of Methylated Circulating Tumor DNAs

Peilin Fang, Xianglin Ji, Xi Zhao, Richard Yan-Do, Youyang Wan, Ying Wang, Yuanting Zhang, Peng Shi*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Methylated circulating DNAs (ctDNAs) have recently been reported as a promising biomarker for early cancer diagnostics, but limited tools are currently available for continuous and dynamic profiling of ctDNAs and their methylation levels, especially when such assays need to be conducted in point-of-care (POC) scenarios. Here, a self-healing bioelectronic patch (iMethy) is developed that combines transdermal interstitial fluid (ISF) extraction and field effect transistor-based (FET-based) biosensing for dynamic monitoring of methylated ctDNAs as a prognostic approach for cancer risk management. The projection micro-stereolithography-based 3D patterning of an Eutectic Gallium-Indium (EGaIn) circuit with an unprecedented 10 µm resolution enables the construction of self-healing EGaIn microfluidic circuits that remain conductive under 100% strain and self-healing under severe destruction. In combination with continuous transdermal ISF sampling of methylated ctDNAs, iMethy can detect ctDNAs as low as 10−16 m in cellular models and is capable of phenotypic analysis of tumor growth in rodent animals. As the first demonstration of a wearable device for real-time in vivo analysis of disease-indicative biomarkers, this proof-of-concept study well demonstrated the potential of the iMethy platform for cancer risk management based on dynamic transdermal surveillance of methylated ctDNAs via a painless and self-administrable procedure.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2207282
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume35
Issue number5
Online published22 Nov 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Feb 2023

Funding

This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (81871452, U20A20194), by the Science Technology and Innovation Committee of Shenzhen Municipality (JCYJ20170818100342392, SGDX2020110309300502), by General Research Fund (11203017, 11215920, and 11218522) from the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong SAR, and by Health and Medical Research Fund (06172336) from the Food and Health Bureau of Hong Kong SAR. Support from the Hong Kong Centre for Cerebro-Cardiovascular Health Engineering and funds from City University of Hong Kong (7005084, 7005206, 7005642) are also acknowledged.

Research Keywords

  • cancer diagnostics
  • circulating tumor DNA
  • epigenetic regulation
  • self-healing electronics
  • smart biosensing
  • wearable devices

RGC Funding Information

  • RGC-funded

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