4.7 Article

Different Strategies for the Microfluidic Purification of Antibiotics from Food: A Comparative Study

Journal

BIOSENSORS-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bios13030325

Keywords

antibiotic extraction; aptamer functionalization; antibody functionalization; microfluidic purification

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The presence of residual antibiotics in food poses a growing risk to human health due to their direct toxicity and the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Microfluidic methods based on magnetic microbeads and polymeric microchambers offer improved performance in terms of speed, portability, sustainability, cost-effectiveness, and ease of use for food safety. Aptamers functionalized microbeads show the most promising results in capturing and releasing antibiotics, providing enriched and simplified solutions suitable for further analysis.
The presence of residual antibiotics in food is increasingly emerging as a worrying risk for human health both for the possible direct toxicity and for the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. In the context of food safety, new methods based on microfluidics could offer better performance, providing improved rapidity, portability and sustainability, being more cost effective and easy to use. Here, a microfluidic method based on the use of magnetic microbeads specifically functionalized and inserted in polymeric microchambers is proposed. The microbeads are functionalized either with aptamers, antibodies or small functional groups able to interact with specific antibiotics. The setup of these different strategies as well as the performance of the different functionalizations are carefully evaluated and compared. The most promising results are obtained employing the functionalization with aptamers, which are able not only to capture and release almost all tetracycline present in the initial sample but also to deliver an enriched and simplified solution of antibiotic. These solutions of purified antibiotics are particularly suitable for further analyses, for example, with innovative methods, such as label-free detection. On the contrary, the on-chip process based on antibodies could capture only partially the antibiotics, as well as the protocol based on beads functionalized with small groups specific for sulfonamides. Therefore, the on-chip purification with aptamers combined with new portable detection systems opens new possibilities for the development of sensors in the field of food safety.

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