AI Article Synopsis

  • Developed a peptide-mediated immunomagnetic separation technique combined with immunofluorescence for fast detection of three foodborne pathogens.
  • The method uses magnetic nanoparticles with specific peptides to capture bacteria and quantum dots to indicate presence, enabling measurement via fluorescence spectrophotometry.
  • Achieves high sensitivity with detection limits as low as 1.070 cfu/mL in milk samples and can complete the entire process in under 4 hours, showing potential for broader applications in pathogen detection.

Article Abstract

This paper presents a peptide-mediated immunomagnetic separation technique and an immunofluorescence quantum dot technique for simultaneous and rapid detection of , , and . First, three peptides that can specifically recognize the three foodborne pathogens were combined with magnetic nanoparticles to form an immunomagnetic nanoparticle probe for capturing three kinds of target bacteria and then added three quantum dot probes (quantum dots-aptamer), which formed a sandwich composite structure. When the three quantum dot probes specifically combined with the three pathogenic bacteria, the remaining fluorescent signal in the supernatant will be reduced by magnetic separation. Therefore, the remaining fluorescent signal in the supernatant can be measured with a fluorescence spectrophotometer to indirectly determine the three pathogens in the sample. The linear range of the method was 10-10 cfu/mL, and in the buffer, the detection limits of , , and were 2.460, 5.407, and 3.770 cfu/mL, respectively. In the tap water simulation, the detection limits of , , and were 2.730, 1.990 × 10, and 4.480 cfu/mL, respectively. In the milk simulation sample, the detection limits of , , and were 6.660, 1.070 × 10, and 2.236 × 10 cfu/mL, respectively. The method we presented can detect three kinds of foodborne pathogens at the same time, and the entire experimental process did not exceed 4 h. It has high sensitivity and low detection limit and may be used in the sample detection of other pathogens.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7495797PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c02833DOI Listing

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