Potassium-Ion-Selective Fluorescent Sensors To Detect Cereulide, the Emetic Toxin of B. cereus, in Food Samples and HeLa Cells.
José García-CalvoSaturnino IbeasEva-Clara Antón-GarcíaTomás TorrobaGerardo González-AguilarWilson AntunesEloísa González-LavadoMónica L FanarragaPublished in: ChemistryOpen (2017)
We report the development of new chemical probes for cereulide, a toxic metabolite produced by specific strains of Bacillus cereus, through displacement of potassium cations from a preformed specific complex and a subsequent change in the fluorescence emission. For this purpose, we designed fluorescent probes for potassium cations that were suitable for displacement assays with cereulide from organic extracts. The fluorescence detection of natural cereulide in rice samples was achieved by using synthetic cereulide as a reference and a potassium fluorescent reporter, and this was found to be useful as a portable and fast method for the in situ detection of cereulide in food extracts. To study the fate of cereulide in live cells, we designed a procedure that was suitable for live-cell microscopy imaging of HeLa cells by comparing the cellular location of the potassium fluorogenic probe, which stained intracellular endolysosomes, in the absence and presence of cereulide; we concluded that in the presence of cereulide, the fluorescence of the probe was decreased because of complexation of the potassium ions by cereulide.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- cell cycle arrest
- single molecule
- induced apoptosis
- quantum dots
- label free
- escherichia coli
- high resolution
- fluorescent probe
- cell death
- small molecule
- energy transfer
- oxidative stress
- high throughput
- ionic liquid
- fluorescence imaging
- minimally invasive
- signaling pathway
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- mass spectrometry