| Literature DB >> 27703269 |
Xiao Liu1,2,3, Yong Zhao2,3, Chongyun Sun2,3,4, Xiaochen Wang2,3,5, Xinrui Wang2,3,6, Pingping Zhang2,3, Jingfu Qiu7, Ruifu Yang2,3, Lei Zhou2,3.
Abstract
Abrin is a natural plant toxin found in the seeds of Abrus precatorius. It may be used for food poisoning or bioterrorism, seriously endangering public health. In this study, a reliable method for the rapid detection of abrin in foods was developed, based on an up-converting phosphor technology-based lateral flow assay (abrin-UPT-LFA). Nine high-affinity monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against abrin were prepared, and the optimum mAbs (mAb-6F4 and mAb-10E11) were selected for use in the assay in double-antibody-sandwich mode. The assay was confirmed to be specific for abrin, with a detection sensitivity of 0.1 ng mL-1 for standard abrin solutions. Good linearity was observed for abrin quantitation from 0.1 to 1000 ng mL-1 (r = 0.9983). During the analysis of various abrin-spiked food samples, the assay showed strong sample tolerance and a satisfactory limit of detection for abrin (0.5-10 ng g-1 for solid and powdered samples; 0.30-0.43 ng mL-1 for liquid samples). The analysis of suspected food samples, from sample treatment to result feed-back, could be completed by non-professionals within 20 min. Therefore, the abrin-UPT-LFA is a rapid, sensitive, and reliable method for the on-site detection of abrin in foods.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27703269 PMCID: PMC5050493 DOI: 10.1038/srep34926
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic description of the abrin-UPT-LFA strip.
The strip is typically composed of a sample pad, a conjugate pad, a NC membrane, an absorbent pad, and a laminating card. UCP-mAb conjugates were immobilized in the conjugate pad. Another mAb against abrin and the secondary antibody (goat anti-mouse IgG antibody) were coated on the NC membrane as the test line and control line, respectively.
Figure 2Comparison of the affinities of different mAb pairs for abrin (10 ng mL−1).
The mAb pair M-10E11 and UCP-6F4, with the highest value for (P − N)/N, was selected as the optimum mAbs use in the abrin-UPT-LFA.
Figure 3Detection of standard abrin samples of 0.1–10 ng mL−1 (a) and of 10–1000 ng mL−1 (b), and the quantification curve for abrin in the assay (c). On the curve, the x-axis refers to the logarithm of T/C –the cut-off value, and the y-axis refers to the logarithm of the abrin concentration (ng mL−1). Data are represented as mean ± s.d., n = 3.
Figure 4Specificity of the abrin-UPT-LFA.
No cross-reactivity was detected with other toxins, even at high concentrations (100 ng mL−1 or 1000 ng mL−1). “ND” means “not detected”.
Figure 5Performances of the abrin-UPT-LFA in detecting abrin in various spiked food samples.
The x-axis refers to the different concentrations or volume ratios used for sample preparation, and the y-axis refers to the detection results (repeated three times) for abrin in samples using the abrin-UPT-LFA. Standard abrin solutions with no food matrices were used as the controls. *MST of each sample. Data are represented as mean ± s.d., n = 3.
Assay sample tolerance and LODs of abrin in food samples.
| Food Sample | MST | LOD* of abrin in food | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solid samples | Cookie | 30 mg mL−1 | 3.33 ng g−1 |
| Soybean | 50 mg mL−1 | 2.00 ng g−1 | |
| Sausage | 200 mg mL−1 | 0.50 ng g−1 | |
| Cashew | 100 mg mL−1 | 1.00 ng g−1 | |
| Powdered samples | Milk powder | 80 mg mL−1 | 1.25 ng g−1 |
| Flour | 40 mg mL−1 | 2.50 ng g−1 | |
| Sugar | 10 mg mL−1 | 10.0 ng g−1 | |
| MSG | 12.5 mg mL−1 | 8.00 ng g−1 | |
| Liquid samples | Water | 2.5:5 (v/v) | 0.30 ng mL−1 |
| Soft drink | 2:5 (v/v) | 0.35 ng mL−1 | |
| Juice | 2:5 (v/v) | 0.35 ng mL−1 | |
| Beer | 1.5:5 (v/v) | 0.43 ng mL−1 | |
“v/v” refers to the volumetric ratio between the sample and the sample treatment solution (PB). For example, 2:5 (v/v) means that 2 mL of liquid sample was mixed into 5 mL of PB.
*For solid and powered samples, the LOD is calculated as “the detection sensitivity (0.1 ng mL−1) / the corresponding MST”; for liquid samples, the LOD is calculated as “the detection sensitivity (0.1 ng mL−1) × the sample dilution fold of the MST”.