Ali Doostmohammadi, Hongsheng Huang, Sohail Naushad, Pouya Rezai
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Portable cell imprinted polymer-based microfluidic sensor for bacteria detection in real water
Cell-imprinted polymer (CIP) based optical biosensors have transformed point-of-care detection. However, challenges remain in their portability and detection sensitivity, time, and cost. Herein, we present an imprinted polymer-based low-cost microfluidic device integrated into a portable enclosure that enables rapid and sensitive bacteria detection in real water. A portable 3D-printed platform was custom-designed, housing all essential detection components, i.e., pumping and fluorescent imaging units and the microfluidic sensor. CIP coated magnetic microparticles (MPs) with affinity to bacteria were manipulated inside the magnetophoretic microfluidic device at an optimized flow rate of 0.01 mL/min for bacteria capturing. Fluorescent imaging pre- and post-bacteria capture facilitated quantification of fluorescence intensity changes as bacteria were trapped by the CIP-MPs. The sensor’s dose–response curve established limits of detection (LOD) and quantification (LOQ) at 8 × 10 and 6 × 10 CFU/mL, respectively, within a dynamic range of 10 to 10 CFU/mL. It specifically detected , distinguishing it from non-specific bacteria like and . In real pond water tests, our sensor detected 2 × 10⁶ CFU/mL, matching a central lab’s result of 2.33 × 10⁶ CFU/mL, demonstrating its effectiveness for real-water monitoring. While further enhancements are needed for improving the specificity in complex environmental matrices and broader bacterial strain detection, the sensor’s simplicity and portability highlight its potential for practical potential.
期刊介绍:
The Microchemical Journal is a peer reviewed journal devoted to all aspects and phases of analytical chemistry and chemical analysis. The Microchemical Journal publishes articles which are at the forefront of modern analytical chemistry and cover innovations in the techniques to the finest possible limits. This includes fundamental aspects, instrumentation, new developments, innovative and novel methods and applications including environmental and clinical field.
Traditional classical analytical methods such as spectrophotometry and titrimetry as well as established instrumentation methods such as flame and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry, gas chromatography, and modified glassy or carbon electrode electrochemical methods will be considered, provided they show significant improvements and novelty compared to the established methods.