Optical Biosensor for Bacteremia detection from human blood samples at a label-free Liquid Crystal-Aqueous Interface: A Rapid and Point-of-Care approach

[Display omitted] •Liquid Crystal based Optical Detector•Rapid response time recorded to be in the order of minutes•Low Limit of Detection at ≥0.02 nM of target DNA•Real Sample Analysis on DNA samples extracted from human blood samples•Point-of-Care diagnostic application for investigating bacteremi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of colloid and interface science 2025-04, Vol.683 (Pt 1), p.79-89
Hauptverfasser: Das, Sayani, Barman, Partha, Chakraborty, Ranadhir, Upadhyay, Anuj, Sagdeo, Archna, Kula, Przemysław, Das, Malay Kumar, Roy, Susanta Sinha
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container_end_page 89
container_issue Pt 1
container_start_page 79
container_title Journal of colloid and interface science
container_volume 683
creator Das, Sayani
Barman, Partha
Chakraborty, Ranadhir
Upadhyay, Anuj
Sagdeo, Archna
Kula, Przemysław
Das, Malay Kumar
Roy, Susanta Sinha
description [Display omitted] •Liquid Crystal based Optical Detector•Rapid response time recorded to be in the order of minutes•Low Limit of Detection at ≥0.02 nM of target DNA•Real Sample Analysis on DNA samples extracted from human blood samples•Point-of-Care diagnostic application for investigating bacteremia Detection of bacteremia requires recognizing bloodstream bacteria. Early identification of bacteremia is imperative for treatment and prevents the escalation to systemic infections like septicaemia. This paper introduces a novel, label-free biosensor based on liquid crystals (LCs), designed to offer rapid and reliable optical detection of blood pathogens without using traditional PCR methods. The biosensor utilizes 16S rRNA, a key structural component of the bacterial genome, as a molecular recognition probe. For accurate detection of target DNA, a nematic LC is positioned within a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) grid cell on a DMOAP-coated glass surface and treated with a cationic surfactant, cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB), to facilitate probe adhesion at the LC-aqueous interface. Initially, the CTAB-coated LC displays a homeotropic orientation, but it shifts to a planar/tilted orientation when the primer is added. Upon exposure to the target DNA, the LC returns to its homeotropic configuration, which can be observed using a polarizing optical microscope (POM) fitted with crossed polarizers. An optimal primer adsorption density of 100 nM allows detection of target DNA at concentrations as low as 0.02 nM. The biosensor has been verified for real-time, point-of-care utility by successfully detecting the genomic DNA of the bacterium E. coli cultured in human blood. The operational mechanism of this biosensor has also been confirmed using Circular Dichroism and Synchrotron X-ray Solution Scattering Measurements. Due to its high sensitivity and label-free nature, this biosensor provides a faster, more practical and user-friendly alternative to traditional pathogen detection methods from blood samples of bacteremia patients.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jcis.2024.12.030
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Early identification of bacteremia is imperative for treatment and prevents the escalation to systemic infections like septicaemia. This paper introduces a novel, label-free biosensor based on liquid crystals (LCs), designed to offer rapid and reliable optical detection of blood pathogens without using traditional PCR methods. The biosensor utilizes 16S rRNA, a key structural component of the bacterial genome, as a molecular recognition probe. For accurate detection of target DNA, a nematic LC is positioned within a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) grid cell on a DMOAP-coated glass surface and treated with a cationic surfactant, cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB), to facilitate probe adhesion at the LC-aqueous interface. Initially, the CTAB-coated LC displays a homeotropic orientation, but it shifts to a planar/tilted orientation when the primer is added. Upon exposure to the target DNA, the LC returns to its homeotropic configuration, which can be observed using a polarizing optical microscope (POM) fitted with crossed polarizers. An optimal primer adsorption density of 100 nM allows detection of target DNA at concentrations as low as 0.02 nM. The biosensor has been verified for real-time, point-of-care utility by successfully detecting the genomic DNA of the bacterium E. coli cultured in human blood. The operational mechanism of this biosensor has also been confirmed using Circular Dichroism and Synchrotron X-ray Solution Scattering Measurements. 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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Aqueous interface
Bacteremia
Bacterial DNA
Biosensor
Human blood
Liquid crystals
title Optical Biosensor for Bacteremia detection from human blood samples at a label-free Liquid Crystal-Aqueous Interface: A Rapid and Point-of-Care approach
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