| Literature DB >> 30466465 |
Marjorie R Willner1, Peter J Vikesland2.
Abstract
The need and desire to understand the environment, especially the quality of one's local water and air, has continued to expand with the emergence of the digital age. The bottleneck in understanding the environment has switched from being able to store all of the data collected to collecting enough data on a broad range of contaminants of environmental concern. Nanomaterial enabled sensors represent a suite of technologies developed over the last 15 years for the highly specific and sensitive detection of environmental contaminants. With the promise of facile, low cost, field-deployable technology, the ability to quantitatively understand nature in a systematic way will soon be a reality. In this review, we first introduce nanosensor design before exploring the application of nanosensors for the detection of three classes of environmental contaminants: pesticides, heavy metals, and pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: Detection; Environment; Heavy metals; Nanomaterials; Pathogens; Pesticides; Sensor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30466465 PMCID: PMC6249933 DOI: 10.1186/s12951-018-0419-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanobiotechnology ISSN: 1477-3155 Impact factor: 10.435
Fig. 1Nanosensor design schematic. First, a class and subsequently a specific contaminant of interest is selected (i). The contaminants discussed in this review are denoted with an asterisk. Next, the number of analytes to be detected by the sensor is chosen (ii) and then the probe is designed. A nanoprobe consists of two core elements, a signal transduction method and at least one nanomaterial, and may also include a recognition element (iii). Ultimately, the sensor deployment format is selected (iv)
Common pesticide classes
| Class of chemical pesticides | Examples | Types | Effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbamates | Carbaryl, methomyl, propoxur, aldicarb | Fungicide, insecticide, acaricide | Non-persistent, cholinesterase-inhibiting, not very selective, toxic to birds and fish |
| Neonicotinoids | Acetamiprid, clothianidin, imidacloprid, nitenpyram, nithiazine, thiacloprid, thiamethoxam | Insecticide | Water soluble, concern regarding persistence and bioaccumulation |
| Organochlorines | Aldrin, chlordane, dieldrin, endrin, heptachlor; lindane, methoxychlor; toxaphene, hexachlorobenzene (HCB), pentachlorophenol (PCP), DDT | Insecticide, acaricide, fungicide | Persistent, bioaccumulative, affects the ability to reproduce, develop, and to withstand environmental stress by depressing the nervous, endocrine and immune systems |
| Organophosphates | Schradan; parathion; malathion | Insecticide, acaricide | Non-persistent, systemic (cholinesterase-inhibiting), not very selective, toxic to humans |
| Phenoxy | 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T | Herbicide | Selective effects on humans and mammals are not well known |
| Pyrethroids | Fenpropathrin, deltamethrin, cypermethrin | Insecticide | Target-specific -more selective than the organophosphates or carbamates, generally not acutely toxic to birds or mammals but particularly toxic to aquatic species |
| Triazines | Atrazine, cyanazine, and simazine | Herbicides | Persistent, binds to the plastoquinone-binding protein in photosystem II, endocrine disruptor in humans |
Fig. 2Illustration of the preparation of the Au–PPy–rGO nanocomposite-based AChE biosensor. Illustration of the preparation of the Au–PPy–rGO nanocomposite-based AChE biosensor and its application for the electrochemical detection of organophosphorus pesticides
(Reproduced from Yang et al. [84] with permission of The Royal Society of Chemistry)
Fig. 3Schematic representation of acetamiprid detection. Schematic representation of the reversible inhibition of the nanozyme activity of GNPs using an acetamiprid-specific S-18 ssDNA aptamer. Step A shows intrinsic peroxidase-like activity of GNPs that gets inhibited after shielding of the GNP surface through conjugation of S-18 aptamer molecules (step B). In the presence of acetamiprid target, the aptamer undergoes target-responsive structural changes and forms a supramolecular complex with acetamiprid resulting in free GNP to resume its peroxidase like activity (step C)
(Reprinted with permission from Weerathunge et al. [95]. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society)
Fig. 4Schematic of synthesis of gold nanoparticle/bacteria cellulose nanocomposites and their applications. Schematic of synthesis of gold nanoparticle/bacteria cellulose nanocomposites (a). Schematic of pH-induced adsorption of carbamazepine (CBZ) and atrazine (ATZ) on AuNP/BC (b)
(Reprinted with permission from Wei and Vikesland [99] from Springer Nature)
Fig. 5Schematic of SERS-active system for HgII ion detection. Schematic illustration of the SERS-active system for HgII ion detection based on T–Hg–T bridges using DNA-Au NPs and DNA-MSS@Au NPs
(Reprinted with permission from Liu et al. [50]. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society)
Waterborne pathogens and their significance in water supplies
Adapted from WHO Table 7.1 waterborne pathogens and their significance in water supplies [6]
| Pathogen | Health significance | Persistence in water supplies |
|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | ||
| | High | May multiply |
| | High | Moderate |
| | High | Moderate |
| | High | Moderate |
| | High | May multiply |
| Non-tuberculous mycobacteria | Low | May multiply |
| | Moderate | May multiply |
| | High | Moderate |
| Other salmonellae | High | May multiply |
| | High | Short |
| | High | Short to long |
| | Moderate | Long |
| Viruses | ||
| Adenoviruses | Moderate | Long |
| Enteroviruses | High | Long |
| Astroviruses | Moderate | Long |
| Hepatitis A virus | High | Long |
| Hepatitis E virus | High | Long |
| Noroviruses | High | Long |
| Sapoviruses | High | Long |
| Rotavirus | High | Long |
| Protozoa | ||
| | High | May multiply |
| | High | Long |
| | High | Long |
| | High | Moderate |
| | High | Moderate |
| | High | May multiply |
| | High | Long |
| Helminths | ||
| | High | Moderate |
| | High | Short |
Fig. 6A schematic of multiplex RNA detection using surface plasmon resonance imaging (SPRi). A schematic of multiplex RNA detection using surface plasmon resonance imaging (SPRi). RNA fragments are first extracted from bacteria of interest (a). A biochip functionalized with three specific capture probes (CP) and a negative control probe (NP), each demarcated in a unique color (b (i)) is shown to exhibit no change in reflectivity (c (i)). Upon introduction to the RNA (b (ii)), there is an increase in single (c (ii)). Finally, gold nanoparticles functionalized with the detection probe (GNP-DP) are introduced and shown to enhance the change in reflectivity
(Adapted with permission from Melaine et al. [139]. Copyright 2017 American Chemical Society)
Fig. 7Schematic of P. aeruginosa LSPR sensor chip (left). Sensor calibration curve, where error bar represents the standard deviation of all data points at a specific bacterial concentration (right).
(Reprinted with permission from Hu et al. [144]. Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society)