Home
Scholarly Works
Multiplexed paper test strip for quantitative...
Journal article

Multiplexed paper test strip for quantitative bacterial detection

Abstract

Rapid, sensitive, on-site detection of bacteria without a need for sophisticated equipment or skilled personnel is extremely important in clinical settings and rapid response scenarios, as well as in resource-limited settings. Here, we report a novel approach for selective and ultra-sensitive multiplexed detection of Escherichia coli (non-pathogenic or pathogenic) using a lab-on-paper test strip (bioactive paper) based on intracellular enzyme (β-galactosidase (B-GAL) or β-glucuronidase (GUS)) activity. The test strip is composed of a paper support (0.5 × 8 cm), onto which either 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-d-glucuronide sodium salt (XG), chlorophenol red β-galactopyranoside (CPRG) or both and FeCl3 were entrapped using sol–gel-derived silica inks in different zones via an ink-jet printing technique. The sample was lysed and assayed via lateral flow through the FeCl3 zone to the substrate area to initiate rapid enzyme hydrolysis of the substrate, causing a change from colorless-to-blue (XG hydrolyzed by GUS, indication of nonpathogenic E. coli) and/or yellow to red-magenta (CPRG hydrolyzed by B-GAL, indication of total coliforms). Using immunomagnetic nanoparticles for selective preconcentration, the limit of detection was ~5 colony-forming units (cfu) per milliliter for E. coli O157:H7 and ~20 cfu/mL for E. coli BL21, within 30 min without cell culturing. Thus, these paper test strips could be suitable for detection of viable total coliforms and pathogens in bathing water samples. Moreover, inclusion of a culturing step allows detection of less than 1 cfu in 100 mL within 8 h, making the paper tests strips relevant for detection of multiple pathogens and total coliform bacteria in beverage and food samples.FigurePathogen Sensing Paper: Paper strips with ink-jet printed sensing zones can detect low levels of pathogenic or non-pathogenic bacteria. Incorporation of an immunomagnetic separation step results in selective detection of ~25 cfu of H7:O157 bacteria in under 1 h.

Authors

Hossain SMZ; Ozimok C; Sicard C; Aguirre SD; Ali MM; Li Y; Brennan JD

Journal

Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, Vol. 403, No. 6, pp. 1567–1576

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

June 1, 2012

DOI

10.1007/s00216-012-5975-x

ISSN

1618-2642

Contact the Experts team