| Literature DB >> 30120328 |
Lian C T Shoute1, Afreen Anwar1,2, Scott MacKay1, Gaser N Abdelrasoul1, Donghai Lin1, Zhimin Yan3, Anh H Nguyen1, Mark T McDermott3,4, Manzoor A Shah2, Jian Yang5, Jie Chen1,6,3, Xiujie S Li7.
Abstract
Sclerotinia stem rot, caused by the fungal pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, is a destructive disease of canola and many other broadleaf crops. The primary inoculum responsible for initiating Sclerotinia epidemics is airborne ascospores released from the apothecia of sclerotia. Timely detection of the presence of airborne ascospores can serve as an early-warning system for forecasting and management of the disease. A major challenge is to develop a portable and automated device which can be deployed onsite to detect and quantify the presence of minute quantities of ascospores in the air and serves as a unit in a network of systems for forecasting of the epidemic. In this communication, we present the development of an impedimetric non-Faradaic biosensor based on anti-S. sclerotiorum polyclonal antibodies as probes to selectively capture the ascospores and sense their binding by an impedance based interdigitated electrode which was found to directly and unambiguously correlate the number of ascospores on sensor surface with the impedance response.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30120328 PMCID: PMC6098051 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30167-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the functionalization of a gold IDE surface to covalently attach insulating self-assembled monolayer (SAM) and oriented immobilization of the anti-S. sclerotiorum antibodies by boronate ester conjugation.
Figure 2Impedance spectra, the plot of impedance magnitude and phase versus frequency for IDE gold electrodes (a): (blue) bare gold electrode before modification, (black) after SAM modification, and (red) after anti-S. sclerotiorum antibody immobilization. Plot of impedance magnitude (b) determined at 1000 Hz for an IDE after different stages of surface modification.
Figure 3Optical images of ascospores selectively captured by immobilized anti-S. sclerotiorum antibodies on SAM modified IDE surface. Each 3 mm × 3 mm IDE was incubated, using PDMS mask with square wells, with a 50 µL solution containing a suspension of a desired concentration of ascospores in nanopure water. The number of ascospores on the surfaces i.e. ascospores/cm2 are (a) (1.1 ± 0.1) × 105, (b) (4.4 ± 0.4) × 104, and (c) (2.5 ± 0.3) × 104. Scale bar equals 100 µm.
Figure 4Plot of impedance change (ΔZ) versus ascospore concentration [ascospore] in the incubation solution. The black line is the linear fit to the experimental data point (filled squares) represent the means of four replicate experiments and error bars are RSD (n = 4). Where, ΔZ = ZAb-Sp − ZAb, and ZAb and ZAb-Sp are the magnitudes of the impedance measured at 1000 Hz before and after the ascospores have been captured by the immobilized anti-S. sclerotiorum antibodies on the surface of modified IDE.
Figure 5Sensor chip, PDMS mask, electrical contact pad, and electrical connector. The sensor chip has eight units of 3 mm × 3 mm square IDEs (a) and the matching PDMS mask has eight wells (b) to fit the IDEs and individually functionalize them. Each gold electrode finger or digit in the IDE has length, width, thickness, and gap of 3 mm, 3 µm, 110 nm, and 3 µm respectively.