| Literature DB >> 27871171 |
Pooja Dua1, Shuo Ren2, Sang Wook Lee2, Joon-Ki Kim1, Hye-Su Shin1, Ok-Chan Jeong3, Soyoun Kim2, Dong-Ki Lee1.
Abstract
Escherichia coli are important indicator organisms, used routinely for the monitoring of water and food safety. For quick, sensitive and real-time detection of E. coli we developed a 2'F modified RNA aptamer Ec3, by Cell-SELEX. The 31 nucleotide truncated Ec3 demonstrated improved binding and low nano-molar affinity to E. coli. The aptamer developed by us out-performs the commercial antibody and aptamer used for E. coli detection. Ec3(31) aptamer based E. coli detection was done using three different detection formats and the assay sensitivities were determined. Conventional Ec3(31)-biotin-streptavidin magnetic separation could detect E. coli with a limit of detection of 1.3 × 106 CFU/ml. Although, optical analytic technique, biolayer interferometry, did not improve the sensitivity of detection for whole cells, a very significant improvement in the detection was seen with the E. coli cell lysate (5 × 104 CFU/ml). Finally we developed Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) gap capacitance biosensor that has detection limits of 2 × 104 CFU/mL of E. coli cells, without any labeling and signal amplification techniques. We believe that our developed method can step towards more complex and real sample application.Entities:
Keywords: Escherichia coli; aptamer; biolayer Interferometry; biosensor; cell-SELEX; impedimetric sensor
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27871171 PMCID: PMC5125936 DOI: 10.14348/molcells.2016.0167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cells ISSN: 1016-8478 Impact factor: 5.034
Fig. 4Gap capacitance impedimetric sensor. (A) Layout of gap capacitance impedance sensor chip. Top and bottom electrode are bonded by parylene layer. The parylene layer also works as fluidic channel in-between the electrode. Layout of whole chip and real chip is shown below. (B) Aptamer immobilization. Thiol modified, cy3 tagged Ec3(31) was immobilized on the Au electrode. Various concentrations were used for coating the electrode. Immobilization efficiency was monitored by fluorescence measurement. (C) Nyquist plot from impedance analysis of E. coli. and microscopic visualization of bacteria on the chip. Bound bacteria was stained with Sybr Gold and visualized under fluorescent microscopy. Imaginary and actual impedance was plotted on the Y and X axis respectively. The high frequency area is being shown here. At higher frequency (over 1 kHz) resistance increases in proportion to the number of bacteria in solution.
Fig. 1Cell-SELEX for E. coli. (A) Progress of SELEX and enrichment of the binders. Quantitative PCR was used to monitor the enrichment in the SELEX pool. Binding relative to the N40 library is shown. (B) Binding of the four selected aptamers relative to N40 library. (C) RNA Draw predictions of the secondary structure of full length Ec3 and the truncated version Ec3(31). The upstream and downstream primer binding sequences are marked in blue and pink circles respectively. (D) The concentration dependent saturation curve for Ec3(31) shows binding affinity of 225 nM. Results are represented as mean ± SD of 3 independent experiments.
Aptamer sequences identified
| Sequence family | Aptamer sequence | % of total sequences |
|---|---|---|
| Ec3 | AUACCAGCUUAUUCAAUU | 20 |
| Ec2 | AUACCAGCUUAUUCAAUU | 7 |
| Ec5 | AUACCAGCUUAUUCAAUU | 6.7 |
Fig. 2Aptamer Ec3(31) mediated E. coli pull-down. Streptavidin coated magnetic beads complexed with Ec3(31)-biotin was used to pull-down E. coli from various concentrations of sample preparations and further cultured on LB plate. Colonies were counted and represented on the Y axis. N40 down primer and SQ2 mutant sequences were used as controls. Results are represented as mean ± SD of 3 independent experiments.
Fig. 3Biolayer Interferometry based detection of E. coli. (A) The Octet sensor was probed with Ec3(31)-biotin or negative (N40, HSR-1, LTA aptamer) and positive controls (E. coli antibody, LPS aptamer) and allowed to bind to 107 CFU/ml of E. coli. The binding response is shown on the Y axis. (B) Binding responses of Ec3(31) at various concentrations of E. coli cells (C) Ec3(31) binding responses for E. coli crude cell lysate prepared from varying cell numbers (D) Competition assay to confirm the specificity of the aptamer Ec3(31) binding to E. coli cell lysate. Results are representative of 3 independent experiments.