Phagomagnetic Separation and Electrochemical Magneto-Genosensing of Pathogenic Bacteria

This paper addresses the use of bacteriophages immobilized on magnetic particles for the biorecognition of the pathogenic bacteria, followed by electrochemical magneto-genosensing of the bacteria. The P22 bacteriophage specific to Salmonella (serotypes A, B, and D1) is used as a model. The bacteria...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical chemistry (Washington) 2013-03, Vol.85 (6), p.3079-3086
Hauptverfasser: Liébana, Susana, Spricigo, Denis A, Cortés, María Pilar, Barbé, Jordi, Llagostera, Montserrat, Alegret, Salvador, Pividori, María Isabel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper addresses the use of bacteriophages immobilized on magnetic particles for the biorecognition of the pathogenic bacteria, followed by electrochemical magneto-genosensing of the bacteria. The P22 bacteriophage specific to Salmonella (serotypes A, B, and D1) is used as a model. The bacteria are captured and preconcentrated by the bacteriophage-modified magnetic particles through the host interaction with high specificity and efficiency. DNA amplification of the captured bacteria is then performed by double-tagging polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Further detection of the double-tagged amplicon is achieved by electrochemical magneto-genosensing. The strategy is able to detect in 4 h as low as 3 CFU mL–1 of Salmonella in Luria–Bertani (LB) media. This approach is compared with conventional culture methods and PCR-based assay, as well as with immunological screening assays for bacteria detection, highlighting the outstanding stability and cost-efficient and animal-free production of bacteriophages as biorecognition element in biosensing devices.
ISSN:0003-2700
1520-6882
DOI:10.1021/ac3024944