4 resultados para Salmonella Infection
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
There is an imminent need for rapid methods to detect and determine pathogenic bacteria in food products as alternatives to the laborious and time-consuming culture procedures. In this work, an electrochemical immunoassay using iron/gold core/shell nanoparticles (Fe@Au) conjugated with anti-Salmonella antibodies was developed. The chemical synthesis and functionalization of magnetic and gold-coated magnetic nanoparticles is reported. Fe@Au nanoparticles were functionalized with different self-assembled monolayers and characterized using ultraviolet-visible spectrometry, transmission electron microscopy, and voltammetric techniques. The determination of Salmonella typhimurium, on screen-printed carbon electrodes, was performed by square-wave anodic stripping voltammetry through the use of CdS nanocrystals. The calibration curve was established between 1×101 and 1×106 cells/mL and the limit of detection was 13 cells/mL. The developed method showed that it is possible to determine the bacteria in milk at low concentrations and is suitable for the rapid (less than 1 h) and sensitive detection of S. typhimurium in real samples. Therefore, the developed methodology could contribute to the improvement of the quality control of food samples.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Bladder cancer is a significant health problem in rural areas of Africa and the Middle East where Schistosoma haematobium is prevalent, supporting an association between malignant transformation and infection by this blood fluke. Nevertheless, the molecular mechanisms linking these events are poorly understood. Bladder cancers in infected populations are generally diagnosed at a late stage since there is a lack of non-invasive diagnostic tools, hence enforcing the need for early carcinogenesis markers. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Forty-three formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded bladder biopsies of S. haematobium-infected patients, consisting of bladder tumours, tumour adjacent mucosa and pre-malignant/malignant urothelial lesions, were screened for bladder cancer biomarkers. These included the oncoprotein p53, the tumour proliferation rate (Ki-67>17%), cell-surface cancer-associated glycan sialyl-Tn (sTn) and sialyl-Lewisa/x (sLea/sLex), involved in immune escape and metastasis. Bladder tumours of non-S. haematobium etiology and normal urothelium were used as controls. S. haematobium-associated benign/pre-malignant lesions present alterations in p53 and sLex that were also found in bladder tumors. Similar results were observed in non-S. haematobium associated tumours, irrespectively of their histological nature, denoting some common molecular pathways. In addition, most benign/pre-malignant lesions also expressed sLea. However, proliferative phenotypes were more prevalent in lesions adjacent to bladder tumors while sLea was characteristic of sole benign/pre-malignant lesions, suggesting it may be a biomarker of early carcionogenesis associated with the parasite. A correlation was observed between the frequency of the biomarkers in the tumor and adjacent mucosa, with the exception of Ki-67. Most S. haematobium eggs embedded in the urothelium were also positive for sLea and sLex. Reinforcing the pathologic nature of the studied biomarkers, none was observed in the healthy urothelium. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: This preliminary study suggests that p53 and sialylated glycans are surrogate biomarkers of bladder cancerization associated with S. haematobium, highlighting a missing link between infection and cancer development. Eggs of S. haematobium express sLea and sLex antigens in mimicry of human leukocytes glycosylation, which may play a role in the colonization and disease dissemination. These observations may help the early identification of infected patients at a higher risk of developing bladder cancer and guide the future development of non-invasive diagnostic tests.
Resumo:
A Salmonella é um microrganismo responsável por grande parte das doenças alimentares, podendo por em causa a saúde pública da área contaminada. Uma deteção rápida, eficiente e altamente sensível e extremamente importante, sendo um campo em franco desenvolvimento e alvo de variados e múltiplos estudos na comunidade cientifica atual. Foi desenvolvido um método potenciométrico para a deteção de Salmonellas, com elétrodos seletivos de iões, construídos em laboratório com pontas de micropipetas, fios de prata e sensores com composição otimizada. O elétrodo indicador escolhido foi um ESI seletivo a cadmio, para redução da probabilidade de interferências no método, devido a pouca abundancia do cadmio em amostras alimentares. Elétrodos seletivos a sódio, elétrodos de Ag/AgCl de simples e de dupla juncão foram também construídos e caracterizados para serem aplicados como elétrodos de referência. Adicionalmente otimizaram-se as condições operacionais para a analise potenciométrica, nomeadamente o elétrodo de referencia utilizado, condicionamento dos elétrodos, efeito do pH e volume da solução amostra. A capacidade de realizar leituras em volumes muito pequenos com limites de deteção na ordem dos micromolares por parte dos ESI de membrana polimérica, foi integrada num ensaio com um formato nao competitivo ELISA tipo sanduiche, utilizando um anticorpo primário ligado a nanopartículas de Fe@Au, permitindo a separação dos complexos anticorpo-antigénio formados dos restantes componentes em cada etapa do ensaio, pela simples aplicação de um campo magnético. O anticorpo secundário foi marcado com nanocristais de CdS, que são bastante estáveis e é fácil a transformação em Cd2+ livre, permitindo a leitura potenciométrica. Foram testadas várias concentrações de peroxido de hidrogénio e o efeito da luz para otimizar a dissolução de CdS. O método desenvolvido permitiu traçar curvas de calibração com soluções de Salmonellas incubadas em PBS (pH 4,4) em que o limite de deteção foi de 1100 CFU/mL e de 20 CFU/mL, utilizando volumes de amostra de 10 ƒÊL e 100 ƒÊL, respetivamente para o intervalo de linearidade de 10 a 108 CFU/mL. O método foi aplicado a uma amostra de leite bovino. A taxa de recuperação media obtida foi de 93,7% } 2,8 (media } desvio padrão), tendo em conta dois ensaios de recuperação efetuados (com duas replicas cada), utilizando um volume de amostra de 100 ƒÊL e concentrações de 100 e 1000 CFU/mL de Salmonella incubada.
Resumo:
Potentiometric detection with homemade polymeric membrane microelectrodes was coupled to a magnetic sandwich immunoassay for Salmonella typhimurium determination. Cadmium and sodium ion selective electrodes were used respectively as indicator and pseudo-reference electrodes and were prepared in pipette tips to allow potentiometric measurements in microliter sample volumes. In the proposed method, the concentration of S. typhimurium was proportional to the amount of cadmium released upon dissolution of a CdS nanoparticle labeled to the secondary detection antibody. The limit of detection was 2 cells per 100 μL. The immunomagnetic assay with potentiometric detection is suitable for sensitive and rapid (average total time per assay of 75 minutes) detection of S. typhimurium in milk samples. The proposed method is easy to perform, safe, sensitive, and low cost and has potential for in situ analysis.