Legionella is a pathogenic bacterium, ubiquitous in freshwater environments and able to colonise man-made water systems from which it can be transmitted to humans during outbreaks. The prevention of such outbreaks requires a fast, low cost, automated and often portable detection system. In this work, we present a combination of sample concentration, immunoassay detection, and measurement by chronoamperometry. A nitrocellulose microfiltration membrane is used as support for both the water sample concentration and the Legionella immunodetection. The horseradish peroxidase enzymatic label of the antibodies permits using the redox substrate 3,3′,5,5′-Tetramethylbenzidine to generate current changes proportional to the bacterial concentration present in drinking water. Carbon screen-printed electrodes are employed in the chronoamperometric measurements. Our system reduces the detection time: from the 10 days required by the conventional culture-based methods, to 2–3 h, which could be crucial to avoid outbreaks. Additionally, the system shows a linear response (R2 value of 0.99), being able to detect a range of Legionella concentrations between 101 and 104 cfu·mL−1 with a detection limit (LoD) of 4 cfu·mL−1.
Microbial detection
is crucial for the control and prevention of
infectious diseases, being one of the leading causes of mortality
worldwide. Among the techniques developed for bacterial detection,
those based on metabolic indicators are progressively gaining interest
due to their simplicity, adaptability, and, most importantly, their
capacity to differentiate between live and dead bacteria. Prussian
blue (PB) may act as a metabolic indicator, being reduced by bacterial
metabolism, producing a visible color change from blue to colorless.
This molecule can be present in two main forms, namely, the soluble
and the insoluble, having different properties and structures. In
the current work, the bacterial-sensing capacity of soluble and insoluble
PB will be tested and compared both in suspensions as PB-NPs and after
deposition on transparent indium tin oxide-poly(ethylene terephthalate)
(ITO-PET) electrodes. In the presence of live bacteria, PB-NPs are
metabolized and completely reduced to the Prussian white state in
less than 10 h for soluble and insoluble forms. However, when electrodeposited
on ITO-PET substrates, less than 1 h of incubation with bacteria is
required for both forms, although the soluble one presents faster
metabolic reduction kinetics. This study paves the way to the use
of Prussian blue as a metabolic indicator for the early detection
of bacterial infection in fields like microbial diagnostics, surface
sterilization, food and beverage contamination, and environmental
pollution, among others.
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