posted on 2015-08-18, 00:00authored byDung Quynh Le, Aya Morishita, Shiho Tokonami, Tomoaki Nishino, Hiroshi Shiigi, Masami Miyake, Tsutomu Nagaoka
We have developed a novel bacterial
detection technique by desiccating
a bacterial suspension deposited on an electrode. It was also found
that the use of an indium–tin-oxide (ITO) electrode dramatically
improved the resolution of the voltammogram, allowing us to observe
two pairs of redox peaks, each assigned to the adsorption of isoprenoid
ubiquinone (UQn) and menaquinone (MKn), which were present in the
bacterial cell envelopes, giving midpeak potentials of −0.015
and −0.25 V versus Ag|AgCl|saturated KCl| at pH 7.0, respectively.
Most of the microorganisms classified in both the Gram-negative and
-positive bacteria gave well-defined redox peaks, demonstrating that
this procedure made the detection of the quinones possible without
solvent extraction. It has been demonstrated that the present technique
can be used not only for the detection of bacteria, but also for profiling
of the isoprenoid quinones, which play important roles in electron
and proton transfer in microorganisms. In this respect, the present
technique provides a much more straightforward way than the solvent
extraction in that one sample can be prepared in 1 min by heat evaporation
of a suspension containing the targeted bacteria, which has been applied
on the ITO electrode.