Paper
13 March 2001 Development of a chemiluminescent enzyme capture immunoassay for the detection of Escherichia coli
Seref Tagi, Philip E. Pivarnik, Arthur Garth Rand
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 4206, Photonic Detection and Intervention Technologies for Safe Food; (2001) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.418717
Event: Environmental and Industrial Sensing, 2000, Boston, MA, United States
Abstract
There has been increasing demand for rapid, sensitive and specific detection of Escherichia coli as an indicator of possible pathogen contamination in foods and water. Approximately 97% of E. coli strains produce ?- glucuronidase (GUS), which could permit the use of a specific microbial enzyme as an alternative approach for detection of E. coli. A procedure was developed for chemiluminometric measurement of GUS using a 1,2-dioxetene derivative as substrate, and was compared to the fluorescent assay for GUS detection. The chemiluminescent assay was found to be 10 times more sensitive than the fluorescent assay. Induction of GUS production in E. coli was maximum when p-nitropheny 1-?-D-glucuronide was used in the growth medium at 0.3 mM concentration after 8 h. GUS was isolated from the growth medium with a 30 minute immunocapture method at 37°C. Anti E. coli GUS antibodies were covalently immobilized on magnetic beads and used for the immunocapture assay. GUS from E. coli culture was captured using the prepared magnetic-beads. Compared to the chemiluminescent assay of GUS in culture filtrate, immunomagnetic capture of GUS provided signal increases up to 81x. The method permitted the detection of 1 CPU/ml of E. coli within 8 hours incubation in growth medium. The chemiluminescent enzyme capture immunoassay developed for the detection of GUS could serve as a quantitative indicator for the presence ofviable E. coli cells. The total assay time including growth, immunocapture and enzyme assay was 9 h.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Seref Tagi, Philip E. Pivarnik, and Arthur Garth Rand "Development of a chemiluminescent enzyme capture immunoassay for the detection of Escherichia coli", Proc. SPIE 4206, Photonic Detection and Intervention Technologies for Safe Food, (13 March 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.418717
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KEYWORDS
Magnetism

Luminescence

Chemiluminescence

Particles

Pathogens

Sodium

Microorganisms

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