Highly sensitive detection of<i> Campylobacter</i><i> jejuni</i> using a carbon dot-embedded nanoMIPs fluorescent sensor
Creators
- 1. Univ Kiel, Inst Mat Sci, Fac Engn, D-24143 Kiel, Germany
- 2. Kiel Univ & Univ Hosp Schleswig Holstein, Inst Infect Med, Kiel, Germany
- 3. Univ Kiel, Inst Phys Chem, Fac Math & Nat Sci, D-24118 Kiel, Germany
Description
Campylobacter jejuni, a leading cause of gastroenteritis worldwide, poses significant detection challenges due to the labor-intensive and insufficiently sensitive current methods. Developing efficient, rapid diagnostics is vital for clinical and food industry applications; yet the vulnerability of biological elements in creating bacterial sensors remains a major obstacle. This study introduces an innovative fluorescence-based sensor employing fully synthetic carbon dot (CDs) functionalized molecularly imprinted polymer (CDs@nanoMIPs) receptors to detect this foodborne pathogenic bacterium. The CDs@nanoMIPs synthesis was accomplished using a solid-phase approach, with an immunodominant epitope of C. jejuni serving as a guiding template. During the polymerization process, nitrogen-doped CDs were synthesized in situ and incorporated into nanoMIPs as a fluorescent tag, constituting approximately 19 % of the composite. The synthesized nanomaterials were characterized by employing transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), dynamic light scattering (DLS), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), fluorescence microscopy, UV-Vis spectrophotometry, and fluorescence spectrometry. CDs@nanoMIPs demonstrated a notable blue fluorescence when excited at 350 nm, along with excellent photostability and a negative zeta potential. These nanostructured particles (59 nm) exhibited moderate polydispersity and a spherical morphology. The FT-IR spectrum deviated from that of conventional CDs, aligning more closely with the template epitope. When in contact with C. jejuni, CDs@nanoMIPs induced a significant increase in fluorescence intensity, enabling the efficient bacterial detection. This interaction showed exceptional affinity and sensitivity towards C. jejuni, featuring a linear range of 1 x 101-1 x 108 CFU mL- 1 (R2 = 0.98) and a low detection limit of 4.6 CFU mL-1. CDs@nanoMIPs-based C. jejuni sensors marked a novel approach to pathogen detection.
Files
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Files
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