Abstract

Vitamin C (l-ascorbate) deficiency is a global public health issue most prevalent in resource-limited regions, creating a need for an inexpensive detection platform. Here, we describe efforts to engineer whole-cell and cell-free ascorbate biosensors. Both sensors used the protein UlaR, which binds to a metabolite of ascorbate and regulates transcription. The whole-cell sensor could detect lower, physiologically relevant concentrations of ascorbate, which we attributed to intact functionality of a phosphotransferase system (PTS) that transports ascorbate across the cell membrane and phosphorylates it to form UlaR's ligand. We used multiple strategies to enhance cell-free PTS functionality (which has received little previous attention), improving the cell-free sensor's performance, but the whole-cell sensor remained more sensitive. These efforts demonstrated an advantage of whole-cell sensors for detection of molecules─like ascorbate─transformed by a PTS, but also proof of principle for cell-free sensors requiring membrane-bound components like the PTS. In addition, the cell-free sensor was functional in plasma, setting the stage for future implementation of ascorbate sensors for clinically relevant biofluids in field-deployable formats.

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