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Escherichia coli Optoelectronic Sensors for In Situ Monitoring of Selected Materials Across Water Supply Systems

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Chemical monitoring of pollutants and hazardous materials in water supply systems traditionally depends on centralized laboratories, advanced instrumentation, and trained personnel, limiting accessibility and preventing real-time, on-site analysis. This work presents an alternative cost-effective, field-deployable approach that uses genetically engineered bioluminescent bioreporters, encapsulated in self-sufficient alginate capsules and integrated with an optoelectronic detection circuit, to detect and quantify target materials in water. We have developed a scalable single-channel prototype featuring four sensing tracks—two for sample measurement, one for clean water, and one for a standard reference solution. The latter employs the standard ratio (SR) method to ensure robust quantification, compensating for batch variability and environmental effects. System characterization showed high uniformity across tracks. Validation with nalidixic acid (NA) demonstrated reliable quantitative performance, with a blind test estimation of 5.6 mg/L for a true concentration of 5 mg/L, well within the calibration error range. Additional sensitivity testing confirmed detection of mitomycin C (MMC) at concentrations as low as 50 µg/L. Overall, the results highlight the potential of bacterial chemical sensing as a practical and scalable tool for real-time, in situ water quality monitoring networks.

Original languageEnglish
Article number62
JournalChemosensors
Volume14
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 by the authors.

Keywords

  • bacterial whole-cell biosensors
  • bioluminescence
  • bioreporters
  • optoelectronic biosensor module
  • water monitoring

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