4.8 Article

Simultaneous Optical Detection of Multiple Bacterial Species Using Nanometer-Scaled Metal-Organic Hybrids

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 94, Issue 31, Pages 10984-10990

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c01188

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JST START [JPMJST1916]
  2. Japan Society for Promotion of Science [KAKENHI 21H04963]

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This paper presents a simple strategy for bacterial identification using the optical properties of polymer-coated metal nanoparticles. The study demonstrates that nanohybrid structures (NHs) can be used as optical markers based on their strong scattered light. The color of the scattered light can identify different bacterial species, making it a useful development for safety risk assessments and environmental surveys.
This paper describes a simple strategy to identify bacteria using the optical properties of the nanohybrid structures (NHs) of polymer-coated metal nanoparticles (NPs). NHs, in which many small NPs are encapsulated in polyaniline particles, are useful optical labels because they produce strong scattered light. The light-scattering characteristics of NHs are strongly dependent on the constituent metal elements of NPs. Gold NHs (AuNHs), silver NHs (AgNHs), and copper NHs (CuNHs) produce white, reddish, and bluish scattered light, respectively. Moreover, unlike NPs, the color of the scattered light does not change even when NHs are aggregated. Introducing an antibody into NHs induces antigen-specific binding to cells, enabling the identification of bacteria based on light scattering. Multiple bacterial species adsorbed on the slide can be identified within a single field of view under a dark field microscope based on the color of the scattered light. Therefore, it is a useful development for safety risk assessments at manufacturing sites, such as those for foods, beverages, and drugs, and environmental surveys that require rapid detection of multiple bacteria.

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