Research12.01.2023

Bioinspired Nanosensors for Cancer Detection


For several cancers, detection at an early stage translates into more effective treatments and a better survival rate. Scientists at the University of Fribourg have developed bioinspired nanosensors allowing rapid, sensitive, and specific detection of cancer-derived biomarkers. These nanosensors may open the way to a new generation of blood-based tests for early cancer detection and monitoring.

When detected at an early stage, many cancers can nowadays be successfully treated and patients fully cured. However, for most cancers, early detection remains a difficult mission, due to biological and technical hurdles. One emerging approach is to measure tumor-derived nucleic acids, DNA and small RNA molecules also called miRNA, as cancer biomarkers indicative of the presence of a tumor. However, their routine measurement is time-consuming, costly, and requires dedicated equipment and specialized laboratories.

Biosensors inspired by nature for detecting tumor-derived biomarkers
DNA is best known as the molecule that naturally carries genetic information in our cells. However, DNA molecules can also be employed as building material to engineer predefined structures with programmable functions at the nanoscale scale. The employed technique is called DNA origami, inspired by the Japanese art of paper folding to create three-dimensional objects. In the context of the NCCR program in bioinspired materials coordinated by the University of Fribourg, the teams of Professor Curzio Rüegg (medicine) and of Professor Guillermo Acuna (physics) collaborate to generate DNA nanosensors for specific and sensitive detections of tumor-derived biomarkers.

In a first project, the PhD student Ivana Domljanovic engineered a book-shaped DNA origami biosensor that produces a strong fluorescent optical readout upon binding of small RNAs (miRNA) specific for breast cancer. Simultaneous detection of two miRNA can be achieved within ten minutes with a very low limit of detection (low picomolar range) and at a fraction of the cost of conventional techniques. This study has been recently published in Nanoscale.

In a second project, the senior assistant and Marie Curie-Sklodowska Fellow Dr. Samet Kocabey, developed a DNA origami nanoarray platform built with a geometric barcoding system for specifically detecting up to four different miRNAs. Detection is based on position-dependent signal recognition using the super-resolution microscopy technique called DNA-PAINT (Point Accumulation for Imaging in Nanoscale Topography), with extremely high sensitivity (low femtomolar range) and single-base specificity. This study has been recently published in Biosensors and Bioelectronics.

Toward a new generation of biosensors
These results have important implications for future work. First, they represent a basis for the development of more sophisticated sensors allowing the simultaneous detection of tens to hundreds of different nucleic acids (multiplexing), or the detection of mutated DNA or large RNA molecules (mRNA). Secondly, they open the way to the development of rapid, safe, simple, and low-cost clinically applicable tests for cancer detection and monitoring. The long-term goal of these projects is to eventually improve cancer diagnostic and patient care.