| Literature DB >> 21437177 |
Lixia Zhou1, Xiaoxiao He, Dinggeng He, Kemin Wang, Dilan Qin.
Abstract
Biosensing technologies promise to improve Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) detection and management in clinical diagnosis, food analysis, bioprocess, and environmental monitoring. A variety of portable, rapid, and sensitive biosensors with immediate "on-the-spot" interpretation have been developed for M. tuberculosis detection based on different biological elements recognition systems and basic signal transducer principles. Here, we present a synopsis of current developments of biosensing technologies for M. tuberculosis detection, which are classified on the basis of basic signal transducer principles, including piezoelectric quartz crystal biosensors, electrochemical biosensors, and magnetoelastic biosensors. Special attention is paid to the methods for improving the framework and analytical parameters of the biosensors, including sensitivity and analysis time as well as automation of analysis procedures. Challenges and perspectives of biosensing technologies development for M. tuberculosis detection are also discussed in the final part of this paper.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21437177 PMCID: PMC3061460 DOI: 10.1155/2011/193963
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
The various mentioned non-biosensing techniques for bacteria detection.
| Method and technique type | Samples analyzed | Detection limit | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCR |
| with the true positivity of 95.5% | Thomson et al. [ |
| Latex agglutination |
| with the true positivity of 73.6% | Krambovitis et al. [ |
| ELISA |
| with the true positivity of 68% | Delacourt et al. [ |
| The AMTDT |
| with the sensitivity of 94.3% | Gamboa et al. [ |
| Radiometric detection |
| — | Middlebrook et al. [ |
| Flow cytometry |
| 3.5 × 103 cells/mL | Qin et al. [ |
| MB/Bact system |
| — | Horvath et al. 2004 |
| MB/Bact system |
| — | Cambau et al. [ |
Figure 1Block diagram drawing of the multichannel series piezoelectric quartz crystal sensor system. The system consists of 3 major components (I) eight samples detection system (A) the circuit of the single oscillator (1) detection cell; (2) 9 MHz AT-cut piezoelectric quartz crystal), (II) microprocessor system, (III) data output system; Reprinted with permission from [48]. Copyright 2008, Biosensors. Bioelectronics.
Figure 2Proposed schematic for the fabrication of nano-ZrO2/Au-based DNA biosensor. Reprinted with permission from [63]. Copyright 2010, Applied Physics Letters.
Different kinds of biosensors for M. tuberculosis detection.
| Biosensor devices | Samples analyzed | Detection limit | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Piezo-immunological sensor |
| 105 cells/mL | He et al. [ |
| The series piezoelectric crystal quartz sensor |
| 2 × 103 cells/mL | He et al. [ |
| Multichannel series piezoelectric quartz crystal sensor |
| 10 cells/mL | Ren et al. [ |
| Electrochemical immunosensor |
| 1.0 ng/mL | Díaz-González et al. [ |
| Electrochemical DNA biosensor |
| 0.065 ng/ | Das et al. [ |
| Magnetoelastic biosensor |
| 104 cells/mL | Pang et al. [ |
| Acoustic wave impedance biosensor |
| 2 × 103 cells/mL | He et al. [ |
| Surface plasmon resonance sensor |
| 30 ng/ | Duman et al. 2010 |