Portable Pesticide Electrochem-sensor: A Label-Free Detection of Glyphosate in Human Urine.
Durgasha C PoudyalVikram Narayanan DhamuManish SamsonSriram MuthukumarShalini PrasadPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2022)
The toxicity levels of and exposure to glyphosate, a widely used herbicide and desiccant, are significant public health issues. In this study, we aim to design a highly sensitive, label-free, portable sensor for the direct detection of glyphosate in human urine. The sensor platform consists of a portable, printed circuit board circular platform with gold working and reference electrodes to enable nonfaradic electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The sensing platform was an immunoassay-based, gold electrode surface immobilized with a monolayer of dithiobis(succinimidyl propionate) (DSP), a thiol-based cross-linker, which was then modified with a glyphosate antibody (Glyp-Ab) through the bonding of the ester group of DSP with the amide of the antibody (Glyp-Ab). The sensor was tested electrochemically, first using the laboratory-based benchtop method for the glyphosate-spiked urine samples, resulting in a dynamic response in the concentration range of 0.1-72 ng/mL with a limit of detection of 0.1 ng/mL. The platform showed high selectivity in the presence of major interfering analytes in urine [malathion (Mal), 3-phenoxybenzoic acid (PBA), and chlorpyrifos (Chlp)] and high reproducibility. The sensing platform was then translated into a portable device that showed a performance correlation ( r = 0.994) with the benchtop (laboratory method). This developed portable sensing approach can be a highly reliable alternate sensor platform for the direct detection of pesticides in human bodily fluids.
Keyphrases
- label free
- high throughput
- endothelial cells
- public health
- low cost
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- risk assessment
- pluripotent stem cells
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- ionic liquid
- computed tomography
- single molecule
- gold nanoparticles
- solid state
- single cell
- quantum dots
- contrast enhanced
- sensitive detection