4.0 Article

Sposensor: A Whole-Bacterial Biosensor That Uses Immobilized Bacillus subtilis Spores and a One-Step Incubation/Detection Process

Journal

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000206634

Keywords

Whole-cell biosensor; Bacillus subtilis; Spores

Funding

  1. Conseil Regional PACA
  2. CNRS
  3. Universite de la Mediterranee

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A generic whole-cell bacterial sensor called sposensor was developed with immobilized spores from engineered Bacillus subtilis. Sposensor contains two different types of spores: reporting spores that contain a reporter gene fused to a promoter responding to a compound to be detected, and control spores use to monitor cell germination and viability. A one-step incubation/detection process was developed to meet the constraints of on-site analysis. Spores were directly incubated with culture medium containing the compound to be detected. beta-Galactosidase was chosen as a reporter protein in both cases and its activity followed by a colorimetric assay. Results showed that sposensor was efficient in detecting two different compounds, a metal (Zn2+) and a peptidic antibiotic (bacitracin). Owing to the stability and robustness of spores, sposensor is a very efficient and easy tool to manipulate for analyzing the presence of toxic compounds in natural settings. Copyright (C) 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel

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