AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacterial spores pose significant challenges in agriculture, food production, and healthcare due to their resilience and the high costs associated with contamination.
  • This study introduces a microfluidic lab-on-chip utilizing a coplanar waveguide (CPW) that generates a strong electric field, effectively disrupting bacterial spores while maintaining low sample heating.
  • The disruption allows for the release and detection of a specific biomarker (calcium dipicolinic acid) through methods like fluorescence spectroscopy and laser tweezers Raman spectroscopy, demonstrating a notable decrease in biomarker presence post-exposure.

Article Abstract

Bacterial spores are problematic in agriculture, the food industry, and healthcare, with the fallout costs from spore-related contamination being very high. Spores are difficult to detect since they are resistant to many of the bacterial disruption techniques used to bring out the biomarkers necessary for detection. Because of this, effective and practical spore disruption methods are desirable. In this study, we demonstrate the efficiency of a compact microfluidic lab-on-chip built around a coplanar waveguide (CPW) operating at 2.45 GHz. We show that the CPW generates an electric field hotspot of ∼10 kV/m, comparable to that of a commercial microwave oven, while using only 1.2 W of input power and thus resulting in negligible sample heating. Spores passing through the microfluidic channel are disrupted by the electric field and release calcium dipicolinic acid (CaDPA), a biomarker molecule present alongside DNA in the spore core. We show that it is possible to detect this disruption in a bulk spore suspension using fluorescence spectroscopy. We then use laser tweezers Raman spectroscopy (LTRS) to show the loss of CaDPA on an individual spore level and that the loss increases with irradiation power. Only 22% of the spores contain CaDPA after exposure to 1.2 W input power, compared to 71% of the untreated control spores. Additionally, spores exposed to microwaves appear visibly disrupted when imaged using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Overall, this study shows the advantages of using a CPW for disrupting spores for biomarker release and detection.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2023.115284DOI Listing

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