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M.A.R.S-Mapping Resistance, Stopping Superbugs 🎯

M.A.R.S-Mapping Resistance, Stopping Superbugs 🎯

M.A.R.S

Multiplex Antibiotic Resistance Screening

"Rapid results for confident treatment"

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1️⃣ The Problem 

  • Doctors hand out broad-spectrum antibiotics “just in case” all the time — without knowing if the bacteria is resistant or not.
  • This is because lab tests take 2–3 days (culture + sensitivity testing).and so they give any antibiotic for temporary purposes.
  • If the antibiotic doesn’t work, the infection worsens, and stronger drugs are given → this fuels the rise of superbugs (multidrug-resistant bacteria).
  • WHO reports ~5 million deaths annually linked to antimicrobial resistance (AMR).
  • Hospital stays become longer, costlier.
  • Last-line drugs (carbapenems, colistin) are failing in some countries.
  • Core of the problem: Diagnosis is too slow and too inaccessible. By the time doctors know the bacteria & resistance profile, the wrong antibiotic may already have been used.

2️⃣ The Gap in the Market  

  • Culture-based tests: Accurate but slow (2–3 days) and require lab infrastructure.
  • PCR/Sequencing: Expensive, technical, and limited to specific genes.
  • Current rapid tests: Single-target or require instruments.

M.A.R.S fills this gap:

  • Rapid (<1 hour) and easy to use.
  • Detects multiple resistance genes at once (multiplex).
  • Affordable (~$5–10 per test).
  • Works in clinics, rural hospitals, and low-resource settings.

3️⃣ The Solution – M.A.R.S 🎯
The M.A.R.S. test is a rapid, point-of-care diagnostic tool designed to quickly screen for multiple antibiotic resistance genes directly from a patient sample. By providing rapid, actionable genetic information, M.A.R.S. allows clinicians to make informed treatment decisions, prescribe targeted antibiotics, and avoid the use of broad-spectrum drugs.

How it works:

M.A.R.S is a palm-sized test cassette:

  1. Sample collection
    Swab blood, urine, or wound → put sample in a small lysis buffer to release bacterial DNA.13715505100?profile=RESIZE_584x
  2. Loading the sample
    Add drops of buffer + sample to the preloaded wells on the cassette.13715510076?profile=RESIZE_584x
  3. Reaction inside the well  --Each well has freeze-dried Cas enzyme + guide RNA (gRNA) + reporter molecule.
    1. Colorimetric readout
    • Reporter molecule = ssDNA/RNA tagged with dye + quencher.
      • Intact → quencher blocks dye → invisible\/no change in colour
      • Cut by Cas → dye released → visible red color
    • Color guide for clinicians:
    1. No colour change = no resistance detected
    2. Red = resistance gene detected.13715509498?profile=RESIZE_710x
    • Interpretation (30–45 min)
    • no colour change → safe to prescribe standard antibiotics
    • red well → avoid that antibiotic class
    •  Multiple red lines → multidrug resistance → escalate treatment.13715510699?profile=RESIZE_710x

4️⃣ Scientific Mechanism 

  1. Sample in buffer
  • Lysis buffer breaks open bacteria → releases DNA/RNA.
  • Stabilizes nucleic acids and prevents degradation.
  1. CRISPR detection
  • Cas enzyme + gRNA scans the solution for target DNA/RNA.
  • gRNA binds only to the resistance gene sequence it is specific to.
  • gRNA is programmed to detect a specific resistance gene:

    • mecA → MRSA (methicillin resistance)

    • blaNDM → carbapenem resistance

    • vanA → vancomycin resistance

    • qnrB → quinolone resistance

    • aac(6’) → aminoglycoside resistance

  • When gRNA recognizes the specific resistant gene, it activates Cas and Cas changes shape upon binding → activates collateral cleavage.
  1. Reporter cleavage → color change
  • Reporter floats freely in the well:

                                Dye — ssDNA/RNA — Quencher

  • So essentially if the guide RNA (gRNA) detects the presence of antibiotic resitant gene in the sample loaded then it binds to it like a lock and key model and the freeze dried cas enzyme then recognizes and cuts the specific resistant gene fragment and has a function called ‘collateral cleavage’ where it not just the target sequence but also the reporter molecules present nearby and dye is released if resistance gene is detected, otherwise the cas is not activated and no cutting occurs so reporter is not cut and dye is not released.
  • Cas cuts reporter → dye separates from quencher → red color appears.
  • If no target → Cas inactive → reporter intact → no color.
  • Multiplexing: Each well/line targets a different gene → simultaneous detection of multiple resistances.

Patient sample → lysis buffer → DNA released

         │

         ▼

   Well with Cas/gRNA + Reporter

         │

Target DNA present? ──► Yes ──► Cas activated → reporter cut → Red color

         │

         No ──► Cas inactive → reporter intact(dye stays quenched) → no colour change

 

5️⃣ Who Does it Benefit? 

  • Patients → get effective treatment fast, fewer complications.
  • Doctors/Hospitals → prescribe confidently, reduce hospital stays and costs.
  • Public Health → slows spread of superbugs, reduces broad-spectrum antibiotic misuse.

6️⃣ Why It Matters to Me 

Antibiotic resistance is a worldwide problem that affects countless lives. The ability to create rapid diagnostics like M.A.R.S(Multiplex Antibiotic Resistance Screening) is very useful because it tackles the problem at its core: preventing the misuse and overuse of antibiotics. As a biotech student and future professional in this field, the idea of providing clinicians with immediate, accurate information to prescribe the right antibiotic – or even avoid one when unnecessary – is incredibly motivating. It's about shifting from broad-spectrum guesswork to precision medicine, a concept I'm passionate about. This project is a way to :empower healthcare with fast, clear, and actionable results that can be used effectively in any clinical setting, truly making a difference in the fight against superbugs.

7️⃣ Road Map to Market  

  1. Prototype: Build cassette/strip with M.A.R.S reporters.
  2. Lab testing: Confirm target detection in bacterial cultures.
  3. Clinical validation: Test on patient samples → compare with gold-standard culture.
  4. Regulatory approval: In vitro diagnostic (IVD) certification.
  5. Launch: Hospitals → rural clinics → pharmacies for point-of-care use.
  6. Expansion: Add more resistance genes, new infections (TB, gonorrhea, hospital-acquired infections).

 

Votes: 25
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Comments

  • Pairing this with an AI or app that interprets the color results automatically would make sure no human error happens — perfect for quick field use.
  • This is a really promising solution, rapid detection of resistance genes could make a huge difference in how antibiotics are prescribed. One thing that could strengthen M.A.R.S even further is planning for real-world challenges like ensuring accuracy in mixed infections, ease of use for non-specialist staff, and scalability in low-resource clinics. If addressed, this could truly be a game-changer in fighting AMR.
    • Thank you! That’s great feedback ,those are exactly the kinds of real-world aspects I hope to refine through testing and iteration. Ensuring accuracy, usability, and scalability will be major steps toward making M.A.R.S a real tool in tackling antimicrobial resistance.
  • M.A.R.S sounds revolutionary in the class of diagnostics. Getting samples in an hour to determine antibiotic resistance seems next gen technology! This will be extremely useful not only for medical professionals but for the patients too. Hopefully we see this scaled up and used as a common practice in the industry in the future.
    • Thank you! That means a lot, I hope M.A.R.S can someday be used widely to help doctors make faster, more accurate treatment decisions.
  • This product is such an effective way to increase the accessibility of testing, and improve the efficiency of the diagnostics and treatment. If the accuracy of results can be proven and false-positives avoided, this is a great product to implement and improve healthcare services
    • Thank you! Absolutely, proving accuracy and minimizing false positives is definitely key.
  • I love the idea here: point-of-care, multiplex resistance detection in under an hour. The devil is going to be in validation and regulatory hurdles like false positives, cross-reactions, and certification can sink good tech. But if those pieces line up, you’re basically giving doctors a tricorder.
    • Thank you so much! You’re absolutely right — validation and regulatory approval are definitely the toughest hurdles for something like this. Ensuring reliability while keeping the test simple and affordable is going to be the main focus going forward. But I love how you phrased it — “giving doctors a tricorder” is exactly the kind of impact we’re aiming for!
  • Such a well thought out and innovative idea. The name is catchy!
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