posted on 2025-01-03, 04:29authored byXin Zhang, WeiWei Zhu, LiangHui Mei, Shanting Zhang, Jian Liu, Fangbin Wang
Pathogenic
bacteria are the source of many serious health
problems,
such as foodborne diseases and hospital infections. Timely and accurate
detection of these pathogens is of vital significance for disease
prevention, control of epidemic spread, and protection of public health
security. Rapid identification of pathogenic bacteria has become a
research focus in recent years. In contrast to traditional large-scale
detection equipment, the fluorescent sensor array developed in this
study can detect bacteria within just five min and is cost-effective.
The array employs nitrogen- and sulfur-doped graphene quantum dots
(NS-GQDs) synthesized through a simple hydrothermal process, making
it environmentally friendly by avoiding toxic metal elements. Functionalized
with antibiotics, spectinomycin, kanamycin, and polymyxin B, the NS-GQDs
(renamed as S-NS-GQDs, K-NS-GQDs, and B-NS-GQDs) exhibit variable
affinities for different bacteria, enabling broad-spectrum detection
without targeting specific species. Upon binding with bacteria, the
fluorescence intensity of the functionalized NS-GQDs decreases significantly.
The sensor array exhibits distinct fluorescence responses to different
bacterial species, which can be distinguished by using various machine
learning algorithms. The results demonstrate that the platform can
quickly and accurately identify and quantify five bacterial species,
showing excellent performance in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, and
stability. This makes it a promising tool with great practical application
prospects in pathogenic bacterial detection.