| Literature DB >> 31877825 |
Palak Sondhi1, Md Helal Uddin Maruf1, Keith J Stine1.
Abstract
Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are endotoxins, hazardous and toxic inflammatory stimulators released from the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, and are the major cause of septic shock giving rise to millions of fatal illnesses worldwide. There is an urgent need to identify and detect these molecules selectively and rapidly. Pathogen detection has been done by traditional as well as biosensor-based methods. Nanomaterial based biosensors can assist in achieving these goals and have tremendous potential. The biosensing techniques developed are low-cost, easy to operate, and give a fast response. Due to extremely small size, large surface area, and scope for surface modification, nanomaterials have been used to target various biomolecules, including LPS. The sensing mechanism can be quite complex and involves the transformation of chemical interactions into amplified physical signals. Many different sorts of nanomaterials such as metal nanomaterials, magnetic nanomaterials, quantum dots, and others have been used for biosensing of LPS and have shown attractive results. This review considers the recent developments in the application of nanomaterials in sensing of LPS with emphasis given mainly to electrochemical and optical sensing.Entities:
Keywords: biosensing; endotoxin; lipopolysaccharides (LPS); nanomaterials
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31877825 PMCID: PMC7168309 DOI: 10.3390/bios10010002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) transport pathway in Escherichia coli. LPS is synthesized on the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane (IM) and flipped to the periplasmic side by the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter MsbA. LPS is then transported to the cell surface by the LPS transport (Lpt) pathway. This pathway consists of seven essential proteins, LptA, LptB, LptC, LptD, LptE, LptF, and LptG. LPS is extracted from the IM in an ATP-dependent manner by the ABC transporter LptB2FG and transferred to LptC, which forms a complex with LptB2FG. LptC consists of a single membrane-spanning domain and a large periplasmic domain, which forms a periplasmic bridge with the soluble protein LptA and the amino-terminal region of LptD. LPS transverses the aqueous periplasmic space through this protein bridge and reaches the cell surface with the aid of the carboxy-terminal domain of LptD, which forms a β-barrel structure that is plugged by the outer membrane (OM) lipoprotein LptE. LPS is composed of lipid A, the inner and outer core oligosaccharides, and the O antigen, which is highly variable and absent in Escherichia coli K-12. The letters (A–G) in the figure correspond to the respective Lpt protein in the transport pathway. EtN, ethanolamine; Gal, d-galactose; Glc, d-glucose; Hep, l-glycero-d-manno-heptose; Kdo, 3-deoxy-d-manno-octulosonic acid; P, phosphate; Pi, inorganic phosphate. (Reproduced with permission from reference [2]).
Figure 2(A) Representation of LPS structure. (B) Fluorescently labeled peptide coupled with graphene oxide acting as a biosensor for LPS by showing variation in intensity of fluorescence upon its interaction with LPS. (Reproduced with permission from reference [52]), copyright ACS).
Figure 3Gold nanorods immobilized on functionalized glass substrates for sensing experiments for LPS. (Reproduced with permission from reference [64], copyright ACS).
Figure 4Schematic representation of the PVM-AuNpCys-CramolL-BSA-LPS biosensor system. (Reproduced with permission from reference [65]). PVM: poly(vinyl chloride-co-vinyl acetate-co-maleic acid); BSA: bovine serum albumin.
Figure 5Schematic diagram showing dye labeled DNA aptamer with magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) and the change in signal on encountering target molecule (Reproduced with permission from reference [80]).
Summary of selected reports on the detection of LPS. When available, the LPS source, measurement time, detection limit, and range of detection are shown in the table.
| Material | Method | LPS Source | Sensitivity, Time | Range | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LAL assay | various | various | 0.005–50.0 EU mL−1 (0.0005–5.00 ng mL−1) | [ | |
| Recombinant Factor C and fluorogenic peptide substrate | fluorescence | various | 0.005 EU mL−1 | 0.005–50.0 EU mL−1 | [ |
| Enhanced green fluorescent protein mutant | Fluorescence | 5 ng mL−1 | [ | ||
| Limulus amebocyte lysate | Quartz crystal microbalance | Endotoxin standard Spiked in human plasma | 0.005 EU mL−1 | 0.005–10 EU mL−1 | [ |
| Dye-labeled LPS binding peptide | Fluorescence quenching on graphene oxide | 130 pM (molar mass of 10 kDa assumed), equivalent to 1.3 ng mL−1, | 0–20 nM, equivalent to 0–20 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| Aptamer modified magnetic beads | Flow cytometry/scanning confocal laser microscopy | 0.01 ng mL−1 | 10−2–10−6 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| Polymer modified gold nanorods | Localized surface plasmon resonance | Ka~107–1010 M−1 for LPS binding to nanorods, depending on polymer | Not reported | [ | |
| Cysteamine-modified gold nanoparticles | Localized surface plasmon resonance | 0.33 nM, molar mass determined as 10 kDa, equivalent to 3.3 ng mL−1, | 5–90 nM | [ | |
| Superparamagnetic nanoparticles/antibodies | Magnetization |
| 0.1 ng mL−1, | 0.1–1000 ng mL−1 | [ |
| Array of silver nanocolumns/polymyxin B peptide | Localized surface plasmon resonance | 0.34 ng mL−1, | [ | ||
| Magnetic nanoparticle/dye labeled aptamer | Fluorescence quenching | 35 ng mL−1, | 50–10,000 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| CdTe quantum dots/Con A | Photoluminescence quenching | 10–90 fg mL−1 | [ |
Figure 6Sensor design and sequential steps to achieve surface biofunctionalization. (Reproduced with permission from reference [104]).
Summary of selected reports on the electrochemical detection of LPS. When available, the LPS source, measurement time, detection limit, and range of detection are given in the table.
| Material | Method | LPS Source | Sensitivity, Time | Range | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gold electrode/SAM/aptamer | Electrochemical Impedance spectroscopy | 0.001 ng mL−1 | 0.001–1.0 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| Gold electrode/polymer/Au nanoparticles/CramoLL lectin | Electrochemical Impedance spectroscopy | Not reported; most sensitive to LPS from | Not reported | [ | |
| Gold electrode/nitrilotriacetic acid terminal SAM/Cu2+ | Electrochemical Impedance spectroscopy | 0.0001 ng mL−1 | 0.0001–0.1 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| Gold electrode/diaphorase enzyme/ferrocenylboronic acid | Cyclic voltammetry | 50 ng mL−1, | Not reported | [ | |
| Au electrode/SAM/rhTLR4/MD-2 complex | Differential pulse voltammetry | 0.0002 EU mL−1 | 0.0005–5 EU mL−1 | [ | |
| Au nanoparticle modified electrode/aptamer | Electrochemical Impedance spectroscopy | 0.05 ng mL−1, | 0.01–10.24 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| Aptamer modified Au electrode | Electrochemical Impedance spectroscopy | 15 min | 0.01–1.0 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| Aptamer modified electrode and modified Au nanoparticles | Differential pulse voltammetry | 0.033 pg mL−1, | 0.05–1.0 pg mL−1; 1.0–10 pg mL−1 | [ | |
| Au cluster—aptamer modified electrode | Differential pulse voltammetry | Endotoxin standard | 7.94 × 10−21 M | 0.01 aM–1.0 pM | [ |
| Fluorinated nanocarbon electrode/poly-ε-lysine | Cyclic voltammetry | Japanese Pharmacopeia reference standard | 0.2 ng mL−1 | 0.02–200 ng mL−1 | [ |
| Polymyxin B modified SAM on Au electrode | Electrochemical Impedance spectroscopy | 0.2 ng mL−1 | 0.2–0.8 ng mL−1 | [ | |
| Ce-based metal organic framework with Au nanoparticles and DNAzyme | Differential Pulse voltammetry | Not given | 3.3 fg mL−1 | 10 fg mL−1–100 ng mL−1 | [ |
| 3D-interdigitated electrode array | Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy | 2000 ng mL−1, | 0–50 μg mL−1 | [ |
Summary of some of the advantages and disadvantages of methods described in this review in terms of binding interaction and signal detection for LPS.
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Inexpensive; ease of use | Reliance on horseshoe crabs; possible variation in lysate potency | |
| Rabbit pyrogen test | Ease of use | Use of rabbits, lack of sensitivity, waiting time |
| Aptamers | Highly specific, high binding affinity, chemically robust | Aptamer availability |
| Polymyxin | Inexpensive and stable | Nonspecific electrostatic interactions |
| Lectin-based detection | Targeting of specific carbohydrate structures | Low binding affinity, affinity for other substrates |
| Toll-like receptor complex-based detection | Highly selective | Stability and proper immobilization of complex |
|
| ||
| Optical detection (Localized surface plasmon resonance) | Use of simple absorbance spectroscopy for detection | Sensitivity varies with particle geometry; non-specific binding must be prevented |
| Optical detection (fluorescence) | High sensitivity | Possible quenching effects or fluorophore degradation |
| Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy | High sensitivity, label-free | Sophisticated instrumentation and data analysis |
| Mass-sensitive detection (e.g., quartz crystal microbalance) | Label-free | Response to non-specific adsorption and changes in viscoelasticity |
| Magnetic nanoparticles | Prospect for separation of target from complex media | More suitable for separation than detection |