| Literature DB >> 30781554 |
Jane Ru Choi1,2, Kar Wey Yong3, Jean Yu Choi4, Alistair C Cowie5.
Abstract
Food safety issues have recently attracted public concern. The deleterious effects of compromised food safety on health have rendered food safety analysis an approach of paramount importance. While conventional techniques such as high-performance liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry have traditionally been utilized for the detection of food contaminants, they are relatively expensive, time-consuming and labor intensive, impeding their use for point-of-care (POC) applications. In addition, accessibility of these tests is limited in developing countries where food-related illnesses are prevalent. There is, therefore, an urgent need to develop simple and robust diagnostic POC devices. POC devices, including paper- and chip-based devices, are typically rapid, cost-effective and user-friendly, offering a tremendous potential for rapid food safety analysis at POC settings. Herein, we discuss the most recent advances in the development of emerging POC devices for food safety analysis. We first provide an overview of common food safety issues and the existing techniques for detecting food contaminants such as foodborne pathogens, chemicals, allergens, and toxins. The importance of rapid food safety analysis along with the beneficial use of miniaturized POC devices are subsequently reviewed. Finally, the existing challenges and future perspectives of developing the miniaturized POC devices for food safety monitoring are briefly discussed.Entities:
Keywords: chip-based devices; food safety analysis; paper-based devices; point-of-care devices
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30781554 PMCID: PMC6412947 DOI: 10.3390/s19040817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Comparison of conventional and emerging food testing technologies.
| Diagnostic test | Types of Targets | Time | Cost ($) | Diagnostic Specificity (%) | Diagnostic Sensitivity (%) | Expertise Required | Special instrument Required | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Bacteria culture | pathogen | ~1–2 days | 3–6 | 100 | 100 | Yes | Yes | [ |
| ELISA | pathogen | ~6 h | 10 | 70–90 | 61–99 | Yes | Yes | [ | |
| qPCR | pathogen | ~4 h | 20 | 100 | 80–100 | Yes | Yes | [ | |
| GC | chemical | ~30 min | 20–30 | 95 | 99 | Yes | Yes | [ | |
| HPLC | chemical | ~30 min | 20–30 | 95 | 99 | Yes | Yes | [ | |
|
| POC devices | pathogen and chemical | ~20–30 min | 2 | 100 | 80–100 | No | No | [ |
Abbreviation: ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; qPCR: quantitative polymerase chain reaction; HPLC: high performance liquid chromatography; GC: gas chromatography; POC: point-of-care.
Emerging point-of-care (POC) devices for food safety analysis.
| Emerging POC Devices | Test Principle | Target Analytes | Sample Type | Sample Pretreatment | Limit of Detection | Assay Time | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paper-based devices | Colorimetric | Chinese cabbage | External steps of grinding and filtration | 10,000 CFU/mL | ~ 1 h | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Clenbuterol | Milk | - | 0.2 ppb | 1 h | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Water | External step of sample enrichment | 10 CFU/cm2 | 1 h | [ | ||
| Colorimetric | Nitrite ion | Water | External step of filtration | 0.5 nmol/L | 5 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Benzoic acid | Water | - | 500 ppm | 1 h | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Copper ions | Water, tomato juices | External step of filtration | 0.3 ng/mL | 2 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Phosphate buffered saline, milk, water and apple juice | - | 10 CFU/mL | 35 min | [ | ||
| Colorimetric | 17β-estradiol | Milk | External step of target separation | 0.25 μg/L | 10 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Alkaline phosphatase | Milk | External step of target separation | 0.1 U/L | 10 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Nitrite | Water | External step of filtration | 73 ng/mL | 15 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric |
| Water | - | 20 CFU/mL | 50 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric |
| Water, milk, spinach | External grinding and filtration steps for spinach | 10–1000 CFU /mL | 1 h | [ | |
| Colorimetric |
| Milk, juice | On-board DNA extraction and amplification | 100–1000 CFU /mL | 1 h | [ | |
| Colorimetric | i) | Phosphate buffered saline | - | i) 105 CFU /mL | 10 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence | Milk | - | ~100 CFU/mL | 30 min | [ | ||
| Fluorescence | Phycocyanin | Water | External step of filtration | 2 mg/L | 30 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence |
| Water, milk | - | 10–1000 CFU /mL | 1.5 h | [ | |
| Fluorescence |
| Water, poultry packing liquid | - | 100–1000 CFU /mL | 5 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence | Thiram | Water | - | 0.1 µM | ~15 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence | Dairy products, marine products, beverages, snacks, and meats | External step of homogenization | 104–105 CFU /mL | 20 min | [ | ||
| Fluorescence | i) Mercury (II) ion | Water | - | i) 121 nM, | 10 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence |
| Water | On-board DNA extraction and amplification | 5 cells | 60 min | [ | |
| Electrochemical | Nitrite | Water | External steps of extraction and filtration | 0.1 µM | ~1h | [ | |
| Electrochemical | Ethanol | Beer | - | 0.52 mM | 1 h | [ | |
| Electrochemical | Water | - | 1.9 × 103 CFU/mL | 45 min | [ | ||
| Colorimetric and electrochemical | i) Lead (II) ion | Water, rice and fish samples | External step of filtration for water samples | i) 0.1 ng/mL | ~10 min | [ | |
| Chemiluminescence | Water | - | 2.6 × 107 CFU/mL | 35 min | [ | ||
| Surface-enhanced Raman scattering | i) Thiram | Apples, oranges, tomatoes, and green vegetables | External steps of fruit cutting | i) 0.26 ng/cm2 | ~5 min | [ | |
| Surface-enhanced Raman scattering | i) Thiram | Water | - | i) 0.46 nM | ~5 min | [ | |
| Chip-based devices | Colorimetric | Aflatoxin B1 | Corn | External steps of homogenization and extraction | 3 ppb | 1 h | [ |
| Colorimetric | i) Gluten | i) Wheat | External steps of extraction and filtration | i) 4.77 ng/mL | 15–20 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric | i) Lead (II) ion | Water | - | i) 30 ppb | 8–10 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Malathion | Apple | External steps of extraction and centrifugation | 100 ppb | 20 min | [ | |
| Colorimetric | Tetrabromodiphenyl ether | Water | - | 0.01 µg/L | 12 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence | i) | Shrimp | External step of homogenization | i) 1000 CFU/mL | 1 h | [ | |
| Fluorescence |
| Chicken extract | Undisclosed external step of extraction + on-board immunomagnetic separation of target | 1000 CFU/mL | 17 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence | Ara h1 | Biscuit | External steps of extraction and filtration | 56 ng/mL | 10 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence | Listeria monocytogenes | Beef filtrate | External steps of homogenization and filtration + on-board immunomagnetic separation of target | 10 CFU/mL | 33 min | [ | |
| Fluorescence | i) | Serum | - | i) 3 copies/µL | 2 h | [ | |
| Fluorescence | Anti-recombinant bovine somatropin antibody | Milk | External steps of extraction and filtration | - | 2.5 h | [ | |
| Fluorescence |
| Pork meat | External step of extraction + on-board immunomagnetic separation of target and DNA extraction | 10 cells/ µL | 40 min | [ | |
| Electrochemical |
| Water | - | 300 CFU/mL | 1 min | [ | |
| Electrochemical | i) | Phosphate buffered saline | - | i) 100 CFU/mL | 30 min | [ | |
| Electrochemical | Milk | External steps of dilution and immunomagnetic separation of target | 12 CFU/mL | 1.5 h | [ | ||
| Electrochemical |
| Milk | External step of immunomagnetic separation of target | 7.7 cells/mL | 1 h | [ | |
| Electrochemical | Clenbuterol | Water | - | 0.076 ng/mL | 6 min | [ | |
| Electrochemical | i) | Peptone water | - | i) 100 CFU/mL | 1 min | [ | |
| Surface plasmon resonance | Ochratoxin A | Wine and peanut oil | External step of extraction for wine | 0.005 ng/mL | 2.5 min | [ | |
| Surface plasmon resonance | i) | a) Cucumber | External steps of homogenization and centrifugation | i) a) 57 CFU/mL; b)17 CFU/mL | 55 min | [ | |
| Surface plasmon resonance |
| Phosphate buffered saline | - | 100000 CFU/mL | 20 min | [ | |
| Surface plasmon resonance | i) | Phosphate buffered saline | - | i) 10,000 CFU/mL | 1 h | [ | |
| Gas-pressure induced ink bar advancement | Bovine catalase | Milk | - | 20 µg/mL | 3 min | [ | |
| Gas-pressure induced ink bar advancement | Aflatoxin B1 | Beer | External step of degassing and filtration | 1.77 nM | 1.5 h | [ | |
| Turbidity | Apple juice and milk | External step of DNA extraction | 1 CFU/mL | 1.75 h | [ | ||
| Other devices: | |||||||
| Thread-based devices | Colorimetric |
| i) Milk | External steps of homogenization and filtration for lettuce | i) 1000 CFU/mL | 10 min | [ |
| Electrochemical | Phenol | Water | - | 2.94 nM | - | [ | |
| Tube-based devices | Colorimetric | Fluoride | Water | - | 0.6 ppm | 1 min | [ |
| Colorimetric | Mercury (II) ion | Water | - | 0.28 ng/mL | 20 min | [ | |
| Cuvette-based devices | Colorimetric | Mercury (II) ion | Water | External step of filtration | 3.5 ppb | 20 min | [ |
| Colorimetric | Fluoride | Water | - | 0.0256 mg/L | - | [ | |
| Well plate-based devices | Colorimetric | i) Tetracyclines | Milk | External step of dilution | i) 1.51 ng/mL | 42 min | [ |
| Colorimetric | i) Saxitoxin | Shellfish | External steps of homogenization, extraction, centrifugation and filtration | i) 0.03 ng/mL | 1 h | [ | |
| Disc-based device | Fluorescence | i) | Chicken meat | External steps of homogenization, centrifugation and DNA extraction | i) 0.03 pg/µL DNA | 1 h | [ |
| Glass slide-based devices | Fluorescence | Anti-recombinant bovine somatropin antibody | Milk | External steps of extraction and filtration | - | 2.5 h | [ |
| Nanomaterial-based devices | Fluorescence |
| Milk | - | 100 CFU/mL | 45 min | [ |
| Electrochemical | Water, fruit juice and milk | - | 3.8 CFU/mL | - | [ | ||
| Gas-pressure induced ink bar advancement | i) | Milk | External step of immunomagnetic separation of target | i) 10 CFU/mL | 2 h | [ | |
| Chemiluminescence |
| Milk | On-board immunomagnetic separation of target | 10 CFU/mL | 2.5 h | [ |
Figure 1Emerging paper-based point-of-care (POC) devices for food safety analysis. (A) An integrated sample-to-answer paper-based colorimetric device was developed for the colorimetric detection of E. coli in contaminated food and drinks. Adapted with permission from [14] © Royal Society of Chemistry (2016). (B) A paper-based fluorescent device coupled with fluorescent quantum dots (QDs) and MIPs was introduced for the sensitive detection of phycocyanin (PC). Adapted with permission from [49] © ACS Publications (2017). (C) A paper-based electrochemical-colorimetric hybrid device was developed for multiplexed detection of food chemicals, including lead (II), cadmium (II) and copper (II) ions. Adapted with permission from [59] © Elsevier (2016). (D) A paper-based surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) device was fabricated with the integration of graphene oxide (GO) and silver (Ag) nanoparticles for the detection of pesticide residues in foods. Adapted with permission from [61] © Royal Society of Chemistry (2018).
Figure 2Emerging chip-based point-of-care (POC) devices for food safety analysis. (A) An automated chip-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed for colorimetric detection of tetrabromodiphenyl ether in water. Adapted with permission from [66] © AIP Publishing (2014). (B) A chip-based fluorescent device coupled with quantum dots (Qdots), aptamer and graphene oxide (GO) was developed for sensitive detection of food allergen Ara h1 in biscuit. Adapted with permission from [68] © Elsevier (2016). (C) A chip-based electrochemical device functionalized with antibody immobilized multi-walled carbon nanotube was developed for rapid detection of clenbuterol in water. Adapted with permission from [77] © Elsevier (2016). (D) A volumetric chip was introduced for the detection of bovine catalase in milk without the requirement of any external detector. Adapted with permission from [83] © Elsevier (2016). Ag: silver; AgCl: silver chloride; IgG: immunoglobulin G; HRP: horseradish peroxidase; H2O2: hydrogen peroxide; O2: oxygen.
Figure 3Other emerging point-of-care (POC) devices for food safety analysis. (A) A thread-based colorimetric device was developed for sensitive detection of Salmonella enterica in food samples such as milk, orange juice and lettuce. Adapted with permission from [86] © Elsevier (2018). (B) A disc-based loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) was developed for multiplexed fluorescent detection of foodborne pathogens, Escherichia coli, Salmonella sp. and Vibrio cholera, in chicken meat. Adapted with permission from [94] © Elsevier (2018). (C) A gold (Au) electrode coated with antibody immobilized graphene-wrapped copper oxide-cysteine hierarchical structure was introduced for sensitive electrochemical detection of Escherichia coli O157:H7 in food samples such as water, fruit juice and milk. Adapted with permission from [97] © Elsevier (2017). (D) A nanomaterial-based chemiluminescent device was developed for sensitive detection of Salmonella typhimurium in milk. Adapted with permission from [99] © Elsevier (2017). rGO: reduced graphene oxide; CuO: copper oxide; Zn-MNCs: Zinc-doped magnetic nanoclusters; Fe3O4 NP: Iron oxide nanoparticle; ATP: adenosine triphosphate; O2: oxygen.