Usefulness of Hybrid Magnetoliposomes for Aminoglycoside Antibiotic Residues Determination in Food Using an Integrated Microfluidic System with Fluorometric Detection.
Ángela Écija-ArenasVanesa Román-PizarroJuan Manuel Fernández-RomeroPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2021)
A new microfluidic approach using hybrid magnetoliposomes (h-MLs) containing hydrophobic magnetic nanoparticles (Fe3O4@AuNPs-C12SH) and encapsulated N-acetylcysteine has been developed in this research to determine aminoglycoside antibiotic (AAG) residues in food using o-phthalaldehyde. Four AAGs, kanamycin, streptomycin, gentamicin, and neomycin, have been used as model analytes. The h-MLs have been used for reagent preconcentration and were retained using an external electromagnet device in the reaction/detection zone in a microfluidic system, inserted into the sample chamber of a conventional fluorimeter. The formation of a fluorescent isoindole derivate caused an increase in the luminescence signal, which was proportional to the analyte concentration. The dynamic range of the calibration graph was 0.1-1000 μmol L-1, expressed as AAG concentration, with an 8.7 nmol L-1 limit of detection for kanamycin and a sampling frequency of 8 h-1. The method was applied to determine AAG residues in milk and meat samples with recovery values between 87.2 and 107.4%.
Keyphrases
- label free
- high throughput
- circulating tumor cells
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- magnetic nanoparticles
- single cell
- real time pcr
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- quantum dots
- ionic liquid
- acinetobacter baumannii
- solid phase extraction
- molecularly imprinted
- living cells
- risk assessment
- drug resistant
- sensitive detection
- cystic fibrosis
- energy transfer
- fluorescent probe
- neural network