An RPA-Assisted CRISPR/Cas12a Assay Combining Fluorescence and Lateral Flow Strips for the Rapid Detection of Enterotoxigenic Bacillus cereus .
Peng-Ru LiZi-Xuan WangZe-Ke XuJuan WangBin LiXing ShenZhen-Lin XuPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2024)
Bacillus cereus ( B. cereus ) is a foodborne pathogen that can produce tripartite enterotoxins, which can cause a variety of diseases after infection. It is critical to rapidly and accurately detect strains with enteropathogenic potential to safeguard human health. In this study, a dual-signal visualized detection platform with fluorescence assay and paper-based lateral flow assay (LFA) based on recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), CRISPR/Cas12a system, and self-developed CRISPR nucleic acid test strips was constructed for enterotoxigenic B. cereus . The genes that encode two tripartite enterotoxins─ nheA , nheB , and nheC for nonhemolytic enterotoxin and hblA , hblC , and hblD for hemolysin BL─were utilized as detection targets. The platform was capable of detecting six enterotoxin genes at the same genomic DNA level. The limits of detection for each gene were 10 -3 ng/μL in fluorescence assay and 10 -4 ng/μL in LFA. Furthermore, 10 1 -10 2 CFU/mL of B. cereus in pure culture was detected. Additionally, a smartphone miniprogram could assist in evaluating the results in LFA. The platform demonstrated good utility by detecting B. cereus in food samples, including milk and rice. The results indicate that our RPA-CRISPR/Cas12a dual-signal visualized detection platform can quickly and easily detect B. cereus with three-component enterotoxin-producing potentials. The whole analytic process took less than 60 min without complex operation or expensive equipment.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- high throughput
- genome editing
- human health
- nucleic acid
- genome wide
- label free
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- single molecule
- real time pcr
- risk assessment
- escherichia coli
- climate change
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- wastewater treatment
- energy transfer
- cell free
- genome wide analysis