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Home 2. Biomedical technology 1. Home 2. Endocrinology & Metabolism * * * --------------------------------------------------------------------- July 29, 2025 The GIST Artificial biosensor can better measure the body's cortisol stress hormone by University of California - Santa Cruz edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed by Andrew Zinin [sadie] Sadie Harley scientific editor Meet our editorial team Behind our editorial process [andrew] Andrew Zinin lead editor Meet our editorial team Behind our editorial process Editors' notes This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility: fact-checked peer-reviewed publication trusted source proofread Artificial biosensor can better measure the body's main stress hormone Graphical abstract. Credit: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2025). DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c05004 Cortisol is a crucial hormone that regulates many important bodily functions like blood pressure and metabolism, and imbalances of this stress hormone can lead to health problems. [INS::INS] Traditionally, cortisol levels must be measured in a doctor's office or other clinical setting. But a new advance in the design of artificial biosensors paves the way for point-of-care testing and diagnoses with far greater accuracy than is currently available. Andy Yeh, an assistant professor of biomolecular engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has invented an artificial, luminescent sensor that binds with cortisol in the blood or urine and then emits light to indicate the levels of the stress hormone in the body. A study in the Journal of the American Chemical Society demonstrates that this technique can detect cortisol across all levels relevant to human health. Yeh demonstrated that this biosensor can be used in combination with the camera on a smartphone to enable people to measure cortisol levels at home or in a clinic, with high levels of sensitivity and without the costly instrumentation of the lab, greatly expanding access to accurate measurement of this important health indicator. Designed from scratch Yeh is an expert in artificial protein design, a technique that uses AI-guided computation to design proteins completely from scratch. This varies from traditional approaches, which modify proteins found in the natural world. To create a new detection system for cortisol, Yeh designed a protein-based biosensor in which the stress hormone triggers two designed proteins to come close to each other at the molecular level. This process leads to light emission, with more light indicating more cortisol. To Yeh's knowledge, this is the first example of a completely computationally designed biosensor that can perform with such high sensitivity and dynamic range for detecting a small molecule analyte. Using a camera to measure the amount and color of light emitted allows cortisol levels to be read with more sensitivity than current tests provide. Artificial biosensor can better measure the body's main stress hormone UC Santa Cruz Assistant Professor of Biomolecular Engineering Andy Yeh's lab focuses on artificial protein design. Credit: Impact Creative for UC Santa Cruz [INS::INS] Point-of-care This new diagnostic tool would be in a "mix and read" format--similar to the technique used in COVID-19 nasal swab rapid tests. The test requires just a drop of blood or urine, which is mixed with a solution that contains the biosensor. Then, a smartphone camera and app could translate the light emitted into a direct measurement of cortisol levels. "You can read the signal directly--the output of the sensor is light emissions, so essentially you can just take a picture of the test with your smartphone," Yeh said. "Ideally, that's really field compatible." Dynamic results The test's high level of sensitivity is a vast improvement over traditional tests, which don't usually offer enough quantitative results when outside of the normal cortisol range. Yeh's solution covers a wider dynamic range, offering quantitative results for healthy, too-low, and elevated levels of cortisol. "This sensor is very, very sensitive compared to the current standard methods used in the hospital," Yeh said. "The dynamic range is huge compared to the traditional assay." Down the line, Yeh envisions that this technology may also be used in a drug-development or diagnostic setting to better understand and treat the health issues that arise from cortisol deficiencies or surpluses. More information: Julie Yi-Hsuan Chen et al, De Novo Design of High-Performance Cortisol Luminescent Biosensors, Journal of the American Chemical Society (2025). DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c05004 Journal information: Journal of the American Chemical Society Provided by University of California - Santa Cruz Citation: Artificial biosensor can better measure the body's cortisol stress hormone (2025, July 29) retrieved 12 August 2025 from https:// medicalxpress.com/news/ 2025-07-artificial-biosensor-body-main-stress.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. 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The sensor enables point-of-care testing via smartphone cameras, offering more accurate and accessible cortisol monitoring than traditional clinical assays. This technology may facilitate improved diagnosis and management of cortisol-related health conditions. This summary was automatically generated using LLM. Full disclaimer Let us know if there is a problem with our content Use this form if you have come across a typo, inaccuracy or would like to send an edit request for the content on this page. For general inquiries, please use our contact form. For general feedback, use the public comments section below (please adhere to guidelines). Please select the most appropriate category to facilitate processing of your request [-- please select one -- ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] Your message to the editors [ ] Your email (optional, only if you'd like a response) [ ] Send Feedback Thank you for taking time to provide your feedback to the editors. Your feedback is important to us. 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