| Literature DB >> 30385866 |
Daniel Quesada-González1, Grace A Jairo2, Robert C Blake3, Diane A Blake2, Arben Merkoçi4,5.
Abstract
The contamination in groundwater due to the presence of uranium is nowadays a subject of concern due to the severe health problems associated with renal failure, genotoxicity and cancer. The standard methods to detect uranium require time-consuming processes and expensive non-portable equipment, so these measurements are rarely performed in-field, which increases the time until water samples are analysed. Furthermore, the few portable methods available do not allow quantitative analysis and the detection limit is often not low enough to reach the recommendations for drinking water (30 ppb or 126 nM of uranium). For the first time, we propose a portable, fast, inexpensive and sensitive paper-based biosensor able to detect in situ U(VI) in water samples: U(VI) selective gold nanoparticle-based lateral flow strips. Antibody-coated gold nanoparticles are used as labels in the proposed lateral flow system because of their biocompatibility; in addition, these nanoparticles provide high sensitivity due to their intense plasmonic effect. The antibody used in the assay recognizes soluble U(VI) complexed to the chelator, 2,9-dicarboxyl-1,10-phenanthroline (DCP). Because of the small size of the U(VI)-DCP complex, this assay employs a competitive format that reaches a limit of detection of 36.38 nM, lower than the action level (126 nM) established by the World Health Organization and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for drinking waters.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30385866 PMCID: PMC6212437 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-34610-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic (not drawn to scale) of the configuration and operating principle of the lateral flow strip for the detection of U(VI). The intensity on the strips can be measured by using a mobile phone camera.
Figure 2(A) Evaluation of the conjugation of 12F6 antibody at different concentrations on AuNPs at pH 7, 8 and 9 by means of the variation of absorbance (ΔAbs.) caused by the addition of NaCl and (B) the corresponding coefficient of variation (CV, %) of each point. (C) Evaluation of the linearity of the color decrease related to U(VI) concentration for LFs at different concentrations of DCP.
Figure 3(A) LFs response at U(VI) concentrations between 0 and 200 nM in HBS buffer and (B) the corresponding working range equation. The data shown in (B) was collected from two different experiments, performed one month apart, with two different LF strip batches. The color intensities at each U(VI) concentration were measured in triplicate. (C) LFs response at various standard U(VI) concentrations in HBS buffer supplemented with pre-treated groundwater and (D) the corresponding working range equation. This curve was generated from two experiments approximately one month apart in which % color at each concentration was measured in duplicates (n = 4).
Evaluation of environmental groundwater samples. Comparison of LFs and ICP-MS.
| Environmental sample dilution factor | % colour | [U(VI)], nM, interpolated from the standard curve | [U(VI)], nM, by ICP-MS |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 39.55 | 58.50 ± 3.11 | 68.90 |
| 15 | 40.05 | 51.70 ± 2.94 | 48.23 |
| 20 | 40.17 | 50.21 ± 2.90 | 34.45 |