| Literature DB >> 27873855 |
Chika Okafor1, Daniel Grooms2, Evangelyn Alocilja3, Steven Bolin4.
Abstract
Johne's disease (JD) is one of the most costly bacterial diseases in cattle. In the U.S., economic losses from the disease have been estimated to exceed $1,500,000,000 per year, mainly from the effects of reduced milk production. Current diagnostic tests for JD are laboratory based and many of those tests require specialized equipment and training. Development of rapid and inexpensive diagnostic assays, which are adapted for point-ofcare applications, would aid in the control of JD. In this study, a polyaniline (Pani)-based conductometric biosensor, in an immunomigration format, was fabricated for the detection of serum antibody (IgG) against the causal organism of JD, Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP). Immobilized Mycobacterium avium purified proteins in the capture membrane were used to detect MAP IgG, previously bound with Pani/anti-bovine IgG* conjugate in the conjugate membrane. After detection, the Pani in the sandwiched captured complex bridges an electrical circuit between the silver electrodes, flanking the capture membrane. The electrical conductance, caused by Pani, was measured as drop in electrical resistance. Testing of the biosensor with known JD positive and negative serum samples demonstrated a significant difference in the mean resistance observed between the groups. This proof-of-concept study demonstrated that a conductometric biosensor could detect MAP IgG in 2 minutes. The biosensor's speed of detection and the equipment involved would, among other things, support its application towards the various point-ofcare opportunities aimed at JD management and control.Entities:
Keywords: Conductometric; Johne’s disease; biosensor; electrochemical immunosensor; immunoassay; on-site diagnosis; paratuberculosis; polyaniline
Year: 2008 PMID: 27873855 PMCID: PMC3705545 DOI: 10.3390/s8096015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.Conductometric biosensor response on purified IgG from serum of JD-infected and JD-free cattle (eight replications per experimental set).
Conductometric biosensor analysis of bovine serum samples at 3 time intervals.
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| A | 1.683 | 43.47 ± 4.76 | 75.63 ± 32.20 | 66.63 ± 24.66 |
| B | 1.380 | 70.33 ± 3.95 | 93.43 ± 33.50 | 81.20 ± 33.98 |
| C | 0.978 | 95.43 ± 12.58 | 97.60 ± 30.19 | 97.13 ± 24.94 |
| D | 0.014 | 437.00 ± 33.29 | 114.73 ± 23.97 | 112.83 ± 20.87 |
| E | -0.020 | 448.37 ± 99.41 | 125.83 ± 19.69 | 117.73 ± 20.85 |
| F | -0.048 | 672.33 ± 101.93 | 228.53 ± 162.9 | 152.13 ± 20.33 |
Johne's disease (JD) positive,
JD negative, the negative OD values are from samples that have less background optical density than the negative serum control,
SD = standard deviation Different superscripts a b c within columns indicate significant differences between the mean resistance of the samples (p <0.05).
Figure 2.Influence of biosensor reading time and ELISA OD on the biosensor resistance; ELISA OD < 1 = JD negative, >1 = JD positive.
Figure 3.Schematic of the fabricated immunosensor strip (A) conjugate membrane containing Pani-AB/IgG (B) capture membrane with immobilized MAPPD.
Figure 4.Cross-section of a capture membrane (A) before (B) after positive JD sample application.