4.7 Review

Nanobody Technology for Mycotoxin Detection: Current Status and Prospects

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins10050180

Keywords

Nanobody; Mycotoxins; Immunoassay; Food safety

Funding

  1. National Natural Sciences Foundation of China [21575155, 31471650]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Mycotoxins, which are toxic, carcinogenic, and/or teratogenic, have posed a threat to food safety and public health. Sensitive and effective determination technologies for mycotoxin surveillance are required. Immunoassays have been regarded as useful supplements to chromatographic techniques. However, conventional antibodies involved in immunoassays are difficult to be expressed recombinantly and are susceptible to harsh environments. Nanobodies (or VHH antibodies) are antigen-binding sites of the heavy-chain antibodies produced from Camelidae. They are found to be expressed easily in prokaryotic or eukaryotic expression systems, more robust in extreme conditions, and facile to be used as surrogates for artificial antigens. These properties make them the promising and environmentally friendly immunoreagents in the next generation of immunoassays. This review briefly describes the latest developments in the area of nanobodies used in mycotoxin detection. Moreover, by integrating the introduction of the principle of nanobodies production and the critical assessment of their performance, this paper also proposes the prospect of nanobodies in the field of food safety in the foreseeable future.

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