4.6 Article

Utilization of a Novel Immunofluorescence Instrument Prototype for the Determination of the Herbicide Glyphosate

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27196514

Keywords

glyphosate; competitive immunoassay; ELFIA; fluorescence detection; Project Aquafluosense

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Research, Development, and Innovation Office
  2. National Competitiveness and Excellence Program [NVKP_16-1-2016-0049, TKP2021-NVA-22]
  3. Hungarian Ministry of Technology and Industry [KEHOP-3.2.1-15-2021-00037]

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This study developed an enzyme-linked fluorescent immunoassay (ELFIA) method to quantitatively determine the herbicide glyphosate in environmental matrices. The method showed improved sensitivity and a wider dynamic range compared to traditional methods.
An enzyme-linked fluorescent immunoassay (ELFIA) method has been developed for the quantitative analytical determination of the herbicide active ingredient glyphosate in environmental matrices (surface water, soil, and plant tissues). Glyphosate, as a ubiquitous agricultural pollutant, is a xenobiotic substance with exposure in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems due its extremely high worldwide application rate. The immunoassay developed in Project Aquafluosense is part of a fluorescence-based instrumentation setup for the in situ determination of several characteristic water quality parameters. The 96-well microplate-based competitive immunoassay method applies fluorescence signal detection in the concentration range of 0-100 ng/mL glyphosate. Application of the fluorescent signal provides a limit of detection of 0.09 ng/mL, which is 2.5-fold lower than that obtained with a visual absorbance signal. Beside the improved limit of detection, determination by fluorescence provided a wider and steeper dynamic range for glyphosate detection. No matrix effect appeared for the undiluted surface water samples, while plant tissues and soil samples required dilution rates of 1:10 and 1:100, respectively. No cross-reaction was determined with the main metabolite of glyphosate, N-aminomethylphosphonic acid, and related compounds.

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