4.8 Article

Advancing In Situ Food Monitoring through a Smart Lab-in-a-Package System Demonstrated by the Detection of Salmonella in Whole Chicken

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202302641

Keywords

food contamination; food sensing; functional DNA probes; in situ monitoring; pathogen detection; Salmonella detection; smart packaging

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Lab-in-a-Package is a novel food packaging platform that allows sampling, concentration, and detection of pathogenic bacteria within closed food packaging without opening it. The platform utilizes an inclined food packaging tray and a reagent-infused membrane to maximize fluid localization and serve as a reagent-immobilizing matrix and an antifouling barrier for the sensor. It is validated using a newly discovered Salmonella-responsive nucleic acid probe, enabling hands-free detection of target pathogens at a level of 10(3) colony forming units (CFU) g(-1) in packaged chicken. Real-world in situ detection is simulated using a handheld fluorescence scanner with smartphone connectivity.
With food production shifting away from traditional farm-to-table approaches to efficient multistep supply chains, the incidence of food contamination has increased. Consequently, pathogen testing via inefficient culture-based methods has increased, despite its lack of real-time capabilities and need for centralized facilities. While in situ pathogen detection would address these limitations and enable individual product monitoring, accurate detection within unprocessed, packaged food products without user manipulation has proven elusive. Herein, Lab-in-a-Package is presented, a platform capable of sampling, concentrating, and detecting target pathogens within closed food packaging, without intervention. This system consists of a newly designed packaging tray and reagent-infused membrane that can be paired universally with diverse pathogen sensors. The inclined food packaging tray maximizes fluid localization onto the sensing interface, while the membrane acts as a reagent-immobilizing matrix and an antifouling barrier for the sensor. The platform is substantiated using a newly discovered Salmonella-responsive nucleic acid probe, which enables hands-free detection of 10(3) colony forming units (CFU) g(-1) target pathogen in a packaged whole chicken. The platform remains effective when contamination is introduced with toolsand surfaces, ensuring widespread efficacy. Its real-world use for in situ detection is simulated using a handheld fluorescence scanner with smartphone connectivity.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available