| Literature DB >> 28914769 |
Fatima Mustafa1, Rabeay Y A Hassan2, Silvana Andreescu3.
Abstract
Nanomaterial-based sensing approaches that incorporate different types of nanoparticles (NPs) and nanostructures in conjunction with natural or synthetic receptors as molecular recognition elements provide opportunities for the design of sensitive and selective assays for rapid detection of contaminants. This review summarizes recent advancements over the past ten years in the development of nanotechnology-enabled sensors and systems for capture and detection of pathogens. The most common types of nanostructures and NPs, their modification with receptor molecules and integration to produce viable sensing systems with biorecognition, amplification and signal readout are discussed. Examples of all-in-one systems that combine multifunctional properties for capture, separation, inactivation and detection are also provided. Current trends in the development of low-cost instrumentation for rapid assessment of food contamination are discussed as well as challenges for practical implementation and directions for future research.Entities:
Keywords: food; integrated sensing systems; multifunctional nanotechnology; pathogens; portable sensors; toxicity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28914769 PMCID: PMC5621351 DOI: 10.3390/s17092121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Aptamer-based biosensors for bacteria detection.
| Ref. | Target Bacteria | NPs Used in the Sensor | NPs Function | LOD | Real Sample | Time | Detection Method | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | SWCNT | Conductive support for aptamer where change in conformation occurs in presence of target bacteria | 1 CFU/mL | - | Few seconds | Potentiometric | 0.2–103 CFU/mL | |
| [ | SWCNT | Conductive support for aptamer where change in conformation occurs in presence of target bacteria | LOD 12 CFU in 2 mL of milk and 26 CFU/mL in apple juice | Milk and apple juice | Couple of minutes | Potentiometric | linear response of up to 104 CFU/mL | |
| [ | AuNPs | Color change due to target induced aggregation | 105 CFU/mL | 20 min or less | Optical/Colorimetric UV-Vis | |||
| [ | CDs | Fluorescent label | 5 × 103 CFU/mL | Shrimp | Optical/Fluorescence | 3.8 × 104–3.8 × 107 CFU/mL | ||
| [ | Gaphene oxide (GO) nanomaterial | Fluorescent signal adsorbent | 11.0 CFU/mL for | 10 min | Optical/Fluorescence | 9.4–150.0 CFU/mL for | ||
| [ | AuNPs-reduced graphene oxide nanocomposite | Signal-amplification and support for aptamer | 10 CFU/mL | water and fish | 60 min | Electrochemical/impedance | 10–106 CFU/mL | |
| [ | nanoscale polydiacetylene polymer (PDA ) | Generates color change | 104 CFU/mL | Clinical fecal specimens | 2 h | Optical/colorimetric UV-Vis | 104–108 CFU/mL | |
| [ | Au layer | The combination of gold and silicon NPs (MG-NP) forms a dilectric layer; attachment of biomolecule changes the peak extinction intensity | 30 CFU per assay | - | - | Optical/localized surface plasmon resonance | 109–104 CFU/mL | |
| [ | 1-Rare earth upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) (NaYF4: Yb, Tm | 1-luminescence labels for aptamers | 25, 10, and 15 CFU/mL for | Milk and shrimp | - | Optical/luminescence | 50–106 CFU/mL | |
| [ | 1-QDs | 1-Fluorescence emitter | 25 CFU/mL for | Chicken and shrimps | - | Optical/dual fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) | 50–106 CFU/mL | |
| [ | graphene to interdigital gold electrodes connected to a series electrode piezoelectric quartz crystal | - | 41 CFU/mL | Milk | 60 min | Mechanical/series electrode piezoelectric quartz crystal | 4.1 × 101–4.1 × 105 CFU/mL | |
| [ | AgNPs | Origin of electrochemical signal | 1.0 CFU/mL | Real water | - | Electrochemical/stripping voltammetry | 10–1 × 106 CFU/mL | |
| [ | antibodies -horseradish peroxidase-gold nanoparticles | Amplification of color | 1 × 103 CFU/mL | milk | <3 h | Optical | 1 × 103–1 × 108 CFU/mL | |
| [ | multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) | Signal-amplification and a support material for the bioreceptor (aptamer) | 25 CFU/mL | chicken | 60 min | Amperometric: Cyclic voltammetry and impedimetric | 75–7.5 × 105 CFU⋅mL−1 |
Figure 1(a) Possible conformations of the aptamers that are self-assembled on carbon nanotubes; (b) Schematic representation of the interaction between the target bacteria and the hybrid aptamer–SWCNT system (adapted with permission from [53]).
Figure 2(A) Biosensing measurements using a potentiometric SWCNP-based aptasensor connected to a sample pretreatment system to remove the matrix in real samples and detect microorganisms. From left to right: filtration of sample and matrix removal, washing with PBS, elution with PBS and potentiometric detection of bacteria recovered in eluate (adapted with permission from [43]. Copyright (2010) American Chemical Society; (B) PDMS/paper hybrid microfluidic system for one-step multiplexed pathogen detection using aptamer-functionalized GO biosensors. (a) Microfluidic biochip layout; (b,c) illustrate the principle of the one-step ‘turn-on’ detection approach based on the interaction among GO, aptamers and pathogens. Step 1: when an aptamer is linked to the GO surface, its fluorescence is quenched. Step 2: when the target pathogen is present, the target pathogen induces the aptamer to be liberated from GO and thereby restores its fluorescence for detection (adapted from [45] with permission of The Royal Society of Chemistry).
Figure 3(a) Schematic representation of the principle of impedance-based detection of S. aureus on a GCE-rGO-ssDNA-AuNPs-aptamer nanocomposite (adapted with permission from [37]); (b) Aptamer based multispot gold-capped NPs array (MG-NPA) chip containing a dielectric layer of a thin gold (Au) layer on silica (Si) NPs-absorbed glass slide (adapted with permission from [42]); (c) Measurements of S. aureuse on Au surface functionalized with grahene and aptamer with modification steps: (A) immobilization of mercaptobenzenediazonium tetrafluoroborate (MBDT) on grapheme; (B) Immobilization of graphene on Au; (C) immobilization of aptamer and (D) detachment of aptamers from graphene in the presence of S. aureus (adapted with permission from [38]).
Figure 4Colorimetric detection of bacteria using aptamers and AuNPs (adapted with permission from [41]).
Figure 5(a) Detection of Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Salmonella typhimurium using aptamer-functionalized QDs and flow cytometry (adapted with permission from [36]); (b) FRET based measurement b (adapted with permission from [31]); (c) shows multiplexed detection of three types of bacteria by three different aptamer-based upconversion rare earth NPs. The detection is based on the luminscence signals of free NPs after separation from bacteria mixture (adapted with permission from [39]. Copyright (2014) American Chemical Society).
Figure 6Example of electrochemical aptamer-based sensor with AgNPs labels and magnetic separation for detection of S. aureus (adapted with permission from [35]).
Figure 7Examples of E. coli immunosensors using: (a) AuNPs with SPR quantification (adapted with permission from [14]) and (b) Au nanorods and two-photon Rayleigh scattering (TPRS) spectroscopy as a detection technique. Adapted with permission from [18]. Copyright (2009) American Chemical Society.
Figure 8AuNPs-based immunosensor for Giardia lamblia cysts detection. (Left) The sample is concentrated through a centrifuge filter, and then incubated with Ab-AuNPs immunoprobes. The binding is quantified as a color change of the AuNPs detected by UV-spectroscopy. The (Right) image shows TEM images of immunoprobes on the surface of Giardia lamblia cysts at a scale of (a) 500 nm and (b) 100 nm. Giardia lamblia cysts morphology is shown in the inset (adapted with permission from [16]).
Immuno-based biosensors for bacteria detection.
| Ref. | Target Bacteria | NPs | NPs Function | LOD | Real Sample | Time | Detection Method | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | AuNPs | amplifying the SPR signal | 104 CFU/mL and 103 CFU/mL in presence of Au NPs | - | 1 min | SPR | 105–107 CFU/mL | |
| [ | AuNPs | Signaling- origin of color | - | Sputum | 5 min | Visually and Optical Density at 600 nm (OD600) | 500–5000 CFU/mL | |
| [ | AuNPs | Signaling- origin of color | 1.088 × 103 cells mL−1 | - | - | UV-Vis | 103–104 cells/mL | |
| [ | magnetic/polyaniline core/shell nanoparticle (c/sNP) | Separation and electrical conductive based material | 40 CFU/mL and 6 CFU/mL | - | ~1 h | Amperometric: Cyclic voltammetry | 100–102 CFU/mL | |
| [ | Au nanorods | Signaling- origin of color | 50 CFU/mL | - | 15 min | two-photon Rayleigh scattering (TPRS) | 50–2100 CFU/mL | |
| [ | AuNPs | Increase sensitivity and stability | 10.0 CFU/mL | Milk | - | Amperometric: Cyclic voltammetry | 5.0 × 101–5.0 × 104 CFU/mL |
Figure 9Schematic representation of the use of immuno-magnetic/polyaniline core/shell nanoparticle (c/sNP) with cyclic voltammerty for Bacillus and E. coli O157:H7 detection (adapted with permission from [17].
Phage-based biosensors for bacteria detection.
| Ref. | Phage | Target Bacteria | LOD | Sample | Time | Detection Method | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | T7 | 10 CFU/mL | Drinking water | 2.5 h | Optical/colorimetric | - | |
| [ | M13KE phage | 5 CFU/L | Water | overnight | Colorimetric-culture based assay | - | |
| 50 CFU/L water (or 5 CFU/mL orange juice and skim milk) | Water, orange juice and skim milk | <4 h | Colorimetric-solution based assay | - | |||
| [ | - | - | - | Bacteria culture | 102–107 CFU/mL | ||
| [ | Engineered HK620 | 10 bacteria/mL | Sea water | 1 h | Optical/Fluorescence | ||
| [ | Engineered HK620 and HK97 | 104 bacteria/mL | - | 1.5 h | luminescence | - | |
| [ | virulent phage-typing (λ vir) | 1 CFU/100 mL | - | 6–8 h | Electrochemical/amperometric | 102–105 with extended incubation time and 105–109 without time extension | |
| [ | T4 | 103 CFU/mL | - | Electrochemical/impedimetric | 103–108 CFU/mL | ||
| [ | Filamentous phage (clone E2—displaying foreign peptide VTPPTQHQ | 102 cells/mL | - | <180 s | Mechanical/QCM | 101–107 cells/mL | |
| [ | 104 CFU/mL surface plasmon resonance | - | 16 min | Mechanical/QCM | - | ||
| [ | T4 and BP14 phage was used to detect MRSA | 103 CFU/mL | 20 min | Optical/SPR | - |
Figure 10Schematic representation of the use of T7 bacteriophage-conjugated magnetic probe to detect Escherichia coli in drinking water (i) Introduction of T7 bacteriophage-conjugated magnetic probe to attack E. coli and separate it by the influence of magnet (ii) The explosion or lysis of E. coli and the release of T7 phages and β-gal; (iii) β-gal catalyzed CPRG hydrolysis to produce colorimetric signal (adapted with permission from [26]. Copyright (2015) American Chemical Society).
Figure 11(a) Concept of bacteriophage-based sensor for E. coli and MRSA using covalently attached T4 and BP14 bacteriophages and (b) The response of SPR upon attachment of phages, and then with E. coli. (adapted with permission from [42]).
Figure 12Illustration of the screen-printed carbon electrode and its use for the EIS detection of magnetically separated E. coli K12 using immobilized bacteriophages (adapted with permission from [32]).
Figure 13(a) Illustration depicting imprinting Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria on a polypyrrole (PPy) film and (b) electrode configuration for label free detection with the PPy film (adapted with permission from [50]. Copyright (2013) American Chemical Society).
Figure 14Schematic representation of micro-contact imprinted SPR and QCM sensor surfaces (adapted with permission from [60]).
MIP-based biosensors for bacteria detection.
| Ref. | MIP | Target Bacteria | NPs Used in the Sensor | NPs Function | LOD | Real Sample | Time | Detection Method | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Polypyrrole (PPy) | - | - | 103 CFU/mL | Apple juice | 3 min | Mechanical/QCM | 103 to 109 CFU/mL | |
| [ | - | - | - | 1.54 × 106 CFU/mL, 3.72 × 105 CFU/mL with SPR and QCM | Apple juice | 113 s for SPR 56 s for QCM respectively, while respectively. | 1-Optical/SPR | 5.13 × 106 CFU/mL, 1.24 × 106 CFU/mL with SPR and QCM | |
| [ | 2,5-dimethyl-4-hydroxy-3(2H)-furanone (DMHF) | Magnetic Fe3O4@SiO2–NH2 (MNPs) | Faciliate separation | AHL LOD 8 × 10−10 mol L−1 | Bacteria supernatant spiked samples | - | Electrochemical/ | 2.5 × 10−9–1.0 × 10−7 mol/L |
Figure 15(A) Impedimetric bacteria sensing platform using synthetic cysteine-modified AMP. (B) Sequence and orientation of the active peptide (WK3(QL)6K2G3C) on AuNPs functionalized electrode (adapted with permission from [56]).
Figure 16Listeria biosensor using modified magnetic NP. (A) gold sputtered on paper (yellow) over a plastic strip with a magnet underneath to remove unbounded magnetic NPs after immobilization; (B) magnetic NPs with immobilized peptide sequence placed over the gold surface to mask the color; (C) Adding protease enzyme of L. monocytogenesis will cleave the peptide from the NPs resulting in dissociation of the magnetic beads complex, exposing the gold surface (adapted with permission from [128]).
Figure 17(a) Example of multifunctional bioassay for detection and disinfection using adsorbed PLL-g-PEG brushes for preventing adsorption of proteins and bacteria (b) Operational principle for capture and detection of E. coli by fluorescently measuring the response of CP coupled with the plasmon-enhance fluorescence from the Ag nanostructure (c) Disinfection is achieved from reactive oxygen species produced by CP under white light irradiation (adapted with permission from [18]).