posted on 2023-05-24, 23:33authored byCristina Rodriguez-Quijada, Casandra Lyons, Maria Sanchez-Purra, Charles Santamaria, Brianna M. Leonardo, Sara Quinn, Michael F. Tlusty, Michael Shiaris, Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli
Seafood contamination with Vibrio bacteria is a problem for aquaculture, especially with oysters,
which are often consumed raw. Current methods for diagnosing bacterial
pathogens in seafood involve lab-based assays such as polymerase chain
reaction or culturing, which are time consuming and must occur in
a centralized location. Detection of Vibrio in a point-of-care assay would be a significant tool for food safety
control measures. We report here a paper immunoassay that can detect
the presence of Vibrio parahaemolyticus (Vp) in buffer and oyster hemolymph. The test uses gold nanoparticles
conjugated to polyclonal anti-Vibrio antibodies in a paper-based sandwich immunoassay. A sample is added
to the strip and wicked through by capillary action. If Vp is present,
it results in a visible color at the test area that can be read out
by eyes or a standard mobile phone camera. The assay has a limit of
detection of 6.05 × 10<sup>5</sup> cfu/mL and a cost estimate
of $5 per test. Receiver operating characteristic curves with validated
environmental samples showed a test sensitivity of 0.96 and a specificity
of 1.00. Because the assay is inexpensive and can be used on Vp directly
without the requirement for culturing, or sophisticated equipment,
it has the potential to be used in fieldable settings.