Abstract
To replace molecular biological and immunological methods, biosensors have recently been developed for the rapid and sensitive detection of bacteria. Among a wide variety of biological materials, bacteriophages have received increasing attention as promising alternatives to antibodies in biosensor applications. Thus, we herein present a rapid and highly selective detection method for pathogenic bacteria, which combines dark-field light scattering imaging with a plasmonic biosensor system. The plasmonic biosensor system employs bacteriophages as the biorecognition element and the aggregation-induced light scattering signal of gold nanoparticle-assembled silica nanospheres as a signal transducer. Using strain SA27 as a model analyte, we demonstrated that the plasmonic biosensor system detects in the presence of excess in a highly selective manner. After mixing of the sample and the phage S13'-conjugated plasmon scattering probe, detection was complete within 15-20 min with a detection limit of 8×10 colony forming units per milliliter.
Citation
ID:
25682
Ref Key:
imai2019darkfieldanalytical