An engineered GFP fluorescent bacterial biosensor for detecting and quantifying silver and copper ions.
Adam Radek MartinezJohn R HeilTrevor C CharlesPublished in: Biometals : an international journal on the role of metal ions in biology, biochemistry, and medicine (2019)
Presented here are two engineered bacterial biosensors for detecting and quantifying silver and copper ions. The biosensors contain a silver/copper resistance operon and a Green Fluorescent Protein gene that is strictly regulated through silver activated promoter regions normally found on a silver resistance gene (sil operon). The two biosensors efficiently detected silver and copper concentrations of 40 µM-300 µM and 20 µM-600 µM respectively. A strong correlation (R2 = 0.90 or above) between silver/copper and GFP signal makes it possible to quantify the ions using a linear regression. At room temperature incubation, the GFP signal of the biosensors in Ag+ saturated after 13 h. However, a detectable GFP signal was seen in 4 h.