4.8 Article

A microfluidic biosensor for rapid and automatic detection of Salmonella using metal-organic framework and Raspberry Pi

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 178, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2021.113020

Keywords

Biosensor; Microfluidic chip; Metal-organic framework; Raspberry pi; Salmonella

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32071899]
  2. Walmart Foundation [SA17031161]

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A microfluidic biosensor was developed for rapid, sensitive, and automatic detection of Salmonella in contaminated foods. The biosensor showed the ability to detect Salmonella Typhimurium with a detection limit of 14 CFU/mL in just 1 hour. The integration of mixing, separation, labelling, and detection on a single microfluidic chip demonstrated automatic operation, fast reaction, less reagent usage, and small size, making it promising for in-field detection of foodborne bacteria.
Rapid screening of pathogenic bacteria contaminated foods is crucial to prevent food poisoning. However, available methods for bacterial detection are still not ready for in-field screening because culture is timeconsuming; PCR requires complex DNA extraction and ELISA lacks sensitivity. In this study, a microfluidic biosensor was developed for rapid, sensitive and automatic detection of Salmonella using metal-organic framework (MOF) NH2-MIL-101(Fe) with mimic peroxidase activity to amplify biological signal and Raspberry Pi with self-developed App to analyze color image. First, the target bacteria were separated and concentrated with the immune magnetic nanobeads (MNBs), and labeled with the immune MOFs to form MNB-Salmonella-MOF complexes. Then, the complexes were used to catalyze colorless o-phenylenediamine and H2O2 to produce yellow 2,3-diaminophenazine (DAP). Finally, the image of the catalysate was collected under the narrow-band blue light and analyzed using the Raspberry Pi App to determine the bacterial concentration. The experimental results showed that this biosensor was able to detect Salmonella Typhimurium from 1.5 x 10(1) to 1.5 x 10(7) CFU/mL in 1 h with the lower detection limit of 14 CFU/mL. The mean recovery for Salmonella in spiked chicken meats was similar to 112%. This biosensor integrating mixing, separation, labelling and detection onto a single microfluidic chip has demonstrated the merits of automatic operation, fast reaction, less reagent and small size, and is promising for infield detection of foodborne bacteria.

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