Congratulations to @FranQuero95 for his work on qByte: Open-source isothermal fluorimeter for democratizing analysis of nucleic acids, proteins and cells - the preprint is out now and features also @FernanFederici @Severine (and me!)
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.11.03.621723v1
Jenny
Abstract
Access to affordable and reliable scientific instrumentation remains a significant barrier to the democratization of healthcare and scientific research. In the field of biotechnology, in particular, the complexity, cost, and infrastructure requirements of many instruments continue to limit their accessibility, especially in resource-limited environments. Despite the recent increase in the development of open-source tools, driven by advances in digital fabrication and electronic prototyping, few of these projects have reached large scale implementation or validation in real-world settings. Here, we present qByte, an open-source, 8-tube isothermal fluorimeter designed to overcome these barriers by offering a cost-effective ($60) yet production-ready solution. qByte leverages standard digital manufacturing and Printed Circuit Board (PCB) assembly techniques and is designed to be portable, making it ideal for both laboratory and field use. The device has been benchmarked against commercial real-time thermocyclers and spectrophotometers, showing comparable results across four key applications: nucleic acid amplification and detection, analysis of protein activity and stability, genetic construct characterization, and bacterial viability tests. Further testing including the on-site diagnosis of human parasites in Kumasi, Ghana, and field work in Patagonia, Chile, validated qByte’s reliability in real-world conditions. Taken together, our results proved qByte as flexible and reliable equipment for a variety of biological tests and applications, while its affordability and open-source design simplify further development and allow adaptation to the needs of future users.