| Literature DB >> 28300766 |
Sai Wang1, Shuai Zhao2, Xiao Wei3, Shan Zhang4, Jiahui Liu5, Yiyang Dong6.
Abstract
Ractopamine (RCT) is banned for use in animals in many countries, and it is urgent to develop efficient methods for specific and sensitive RCT detection. A label-free indirect competitive surface plasmon resonance (SPR) immunosensor was first developed with a primary antibody herein and then improved by a secondary antibody for the detection of RCT residue in swine urine. Meanwhile, a pre-incubation process of RCT and the primary antibody was performed to further improve the sensitivity. With all the key parameters optimized, the improved immunosenor can attain a linear range of 0.3-32 ng/mL and a limit of detection (LOD) of 0.09 ng/mL for RCT detection with high specificity. Furthermore, the improved label-free SPR immunosenor was compared thoroughly with a conventional enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The SPR immunosensor showed advantages over the ELISA in terms of LOD, reagent consumption, analysis time, experiment automation, and so on. The SPR immunosensor can be used as potential method for real-time monitoring and screening of RCT residue in swine urine or other samples. In addition, the design using antibody pairs for biosensor development can be further referred to for other small molecule detection.Entities:
Keywords: ELISA; SPR immunosensor; ractopamine; swine urine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28300766 PMCID: PMC5375890 DOI: 10.3390/s17030604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Scheme 1Schematic illustration of the label-free indirect competitive SPR immunosensor and the ELISA immunosensor. For both assays, RCT-BSA was immobilized on solid surface, RCT/antibody I mixture was added for competitive reaction, and antibody II/HRP-antibody II was added to bind with antibody I and used for signal amplification. (a) RCT-BSA was immobilized on channel 2 of CM5 chip, and the SPR signal responses were generated along with the combination of the RCT-BSA/antibody I/antibody II. Channel 1 was used as a reference channel; (b) RCT-BSA was immobilized on the bottom of microwells and the ELISA signals were obtain by the catalytic reaction of HRP and TMB.
Figure 1Optimization of key parameters of the primary SPR immunosensor. (a) Optimization of the coupling concentration of RCT-BSA; (b) Optimization of the coupling pH of RCT-BSA; (c) Optimization of the dilution ratio of antibody I; (d) Optimization of pre-incubation time with antibody I diluted at 1:1000; (e) Optimization of pre-incubation time with the antibody I diluted at 1:500; (f) Optimization of pre-incubation time with the antibody I diluted at 1:200. Data points are the average ± standard deviation (n = 3).
Figure 2RCT detection in both PBS buffer and swine urine samples using the primary and improved SPR immunosensors. (a) Competition curves with different concentrations of antibody I using the primary SPR immunosensor; (b) Competition curves in PBS buffer and swine urine samples using 1:1000 antibody I with the primary SPR immunosensor; (c) Comparison of the primary and improved SPR immunosensors; (d) Calibration curves obtained from the primary and improved SPR immunosensors; (e) Specificity assay with different β-agonists. RCT, ractopamine; SAL, salbutamol; CL, clenbuterol. Data points are the average ± standard deviation (n = 3).
Comparison of various analytical methods for RCT detection.
| Analytical Methods | LOD (ng/mL) | Linear Range (ng/mL) | Sample | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GC-MS | 4 | 10–500 | feed sample | [ |
| LC-MS | 1 | Not available | Bovine muscle | [ |
| Fluorescence immunoassay | 0.1 | 1–10 | swine tissue | [ |
| Fluorescence immunoassay | 1 | 2.3–50 | pork | [ |
| Nanoparticle immunoassay | 0.34 | 1–40 | pork | [ |
| Aptamer-AuNPs-MIP | 10 | 10–400 | feed, beef | [ |
| Electrochemical aptasensors | 0.04 | 0.1–10 | pork | [ |
| SPR immunoassay | 0.12 | 0.28–4.29 | liver | [ |
| SPR immunoassay | 0.22 | 0.3–32 | swine urine | This paper |
| Improved SPR immunoassay | 0.09 | 0.3–32 | swine urine | This paper |
GC-MS, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; AuNPs, gold nanoparticles; MIP, molecular imprinting polymers.
Recovery study of the improved SPR immunosensor.
| Spiked Concentration (ng/mL) | Measured Concentration (ng/mL, Mean ± SD) | Recovery (%, Mean) | RSD (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.3 | 0.5161 ± 0.02532 | 103.2 | 4.906 |
| 2 | 2.1323 ± 0.1462 | 106.6 | 6.856 |
| 16 | 16.2898 ± 1.2731 | 101.8 | 7.815 |
Figure 3Comparison of the SPR immunosensor and the ELISA immunosensor for RCT detection in swine urine. (a) Dose-response curves obtained from the two immunosensors. (b) Calibration curves obtained from these two immunosensors. Data points are the average ± standard deviation (n = 3).
Thorough comparison of SPR immunosensor and the ELISA immunosensor.
| SPR | ELISA | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.09 ng/mL | 0.21 | ||
| 0.3–32 ng/mL | 0.3–32 ng/mL | ||
| Matrix | CM5 chip | Microwells | |
| Reusability | Yes (>50 times) | No | |
| RCT-BSA | 110 μL in total | 100 μL/sample | |
| Antibody I | 80 μL/sample | 50 μL/sample | |
| Antibody II/HRP-antibody II | 80 μL/sample | 100 μL/sample | |
| TMB | - | 100 μL/sample | |
| Immobilization time | 11 min | Overnight | |
| Blocking time | 7 min | 2 h | |
| Competition time | 4 min | 45 min | |
| Signal amplification time | 4 min | 45 min | |
| Yes | No | ||
| Antibody I | No | No | |
| Antibody II | No | HRP | |