Biosensor detects toxins in water sources
UC environmental engineers’ research featured in NSF video
University of Cincinnati environmental engineers and chemists developed a biosensor to detect toxins in surface water such as streams, rivers and lakes. Funded through National Science Foundation (NSF) grants, the research was recently featured in an NSF video.
The research is led by Dionysios Dionysiou, professor of environmental engineering, and addresses the importance of detecting toxic products of cyanobacteria algal blooms, which are formed mainly by agricultural runoff. Project collaborators at UC include Vesselin Shanov, professor of chemical engineering; Ryan White, associate professor of electrical engineering and chemistry; and Bill Heineman, professor of chemistry.
The research team, including research assistant and environmental engineering Ph.D. student Vasileia Vogiazi whose work was featured in a previous article, created a sensor to identify and measure microcystins. These toxins are produced from algal blooms and can cause skin irritation, nausea or vomiting if swallowed, and liver damage if large amounts are ingested. Understanding the toxin’s impact on the water supply can aid water treatment plants to adjust the treatment strategy to keep these microcystins from contaminating drinking water.
Video courtesy of National Science Foundation.
Featured image at top: A satellite image of algal blooms on Lake Erie. Photo/Nasa.
Related Stories
UC Foundation reveals 2025 philanthropy winners
October 27, 2025
The University of Cincinnati Foundation recognized its Outstanding Philanthropic Volunteer Award honorees at the George Rieveschl Recognition Dinner on Oct. 23, 2025.
UC team unveils Wyandot Removal Trail across Ohio
October 24, 2025
Rebecca Wingo, an associate professor of history and director of the public history program in the University of Cincinnati’s College of Arts and Sciences, is featured in a WVXU story about new historical markers honoring the Wyandot people—the last Indigenous nation forcibly removed from Ohio.
John Updike called his letters dull. They’re anything but.
October 23, 2025
James A. Schiff, founding editor of The John Updike Review and UC English professor, edited Selected Letters of John Updike, the first comprehensive collection of the author’s correspondence. Drawing from thousands of letters spanning Updike’s life, Schiff offers new insight into the writer’s personal and literary world. The volume was edited by The New York Times.