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Smartphone analysis and dark-field microscopy observation for aflatoxin B1 detection based on the disintegration of core-shell Ag@Au nanoparticles

Food Bioscience [2024]
Qian Zhao, Xinhui Xie, Liye Chen, Jiahao Wu, Ziping Jiang, Xingbo Shi
ABSTRACT

Aflatoxin B1 (AFB1), one of the most toxic mycotoxins, is commonly found in various food. This study develops a dual-mode biosensor integrating smartphone analysis and dark-field microscopy (DFM) observation for AFB1 detection based on the disintegration of core-shell Ag@Au nanoparticles (Ag@Au NPs). Employing a sandwich assay format, AFB1 aptamer assembled Ag@Au NPs are anchored on 96-well plate and disintegrated by nitric acid. Thereafter, the Ag core is etched, releasing Ag + that serve as colorimetric signal regulators upon the introduction of the glutathione-manganese dioxide nanosheets-3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine substrate. The color signal is analyzed using a smartphone based on red-green-blue value analysis. Furthermore, the collapsed Au shell releases individual Au NPs that serve as dark-field scattering nanoprobes, producing a high-intensity green dark-field scattering signal under DFM observation. The detection limit (3.67 fg/mL) is 199/8174/2180-fold lower than those of colorimetric signal, commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit, and high-performance liquid chromatography, respectively. Overall, smartphone analysis enables on-site preliminary screening without sophisticated instrumentation. DFM observation allows the ultra-sensitive quantitative detection in a laboratory. The proposed dual-mode biosensor will not only reduce false-positive/negative rate through the bidirectional signal readout, but also offer a practical, stable, and ultrasensitive strategy for AFB1 detection in food.

MATERIALS

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