An electrochemical biosensor based on methylene blue-loaded nanocomposites as signal-amplifying tags to detect pathogenic bacteria.

Journal: The Analyst
Published:
Abstract

A sandwich-type electrochemical biosensor was successfully constructed for the sensitive detection of pathogenic bacteria. In this biosensor platform, methylene blue (MB) organic-inorganic nanocomposites (MB@MI) were synthesized from magainin I (MI, antimicrobial peptide specific to Escherichia coli O157:H7), Cu3(PO4)2 and MB via a one-pot method, and were explored as a novel electrochemical signal label of biosensors generating amplified electrochemical signals by differential pulse voltammetry (DPV). E. coli O157:H7 specifically sandwich bound to the aptamers on the electrode surface and MB@MI nanocomposites, and the changes in the current signal generated on the electrode surface were used for the quantitative determination of E. coli O157:H7. Under optimum conditions, the proposed biosensor showed excellent performance with a wide linear range of 102-107 CFU mL-1 and a low detection limit of 32 CFU mL-1, featuring favorable selectivity, repeatability and stability. According to the experiments conducted on real samples, the proposed approach is capable of detecting pathogenic bacteria in clinical diagnostics.

Authors
Shengjun Bu, Kuiyu Wang, Zhongyi Li, Chengyu Wang, Zhuo Hao, Wensen Liu, Jiayu Wan