Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/158474
Title: A Lab-on-a-Chip Approach for the Detection of the Quarantine Potato Cyst Nematode Globodera pallida
Author: Camacho, Maria João
Albuquerque, Débora C.
de Andrade, Eugénia
Martins, Verónica C.
Inácio, Maria L.
Mota, Manuel
Freitas, Paulo P.
Keywords: asymmetric PCR
magnetoresistive biochips
PCN
Analytical Chemistry
Information Systems
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Biochemistry
Instrumentation
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Issue Date: Jan-2023
Abstract: The potato cyst nematode (PCN), Globodera pallida, has acquired significant importance throughout Europe due to its widespread prevalence and negative effects on potato production. Thus, rapid and reliable diagnosis of PCN is critical during surveillance programs and for the implementation of control measures. The development of innovative technologies to overcome the limitations of current methodologies in achieving early detection is needed. Lab-on-a-chip devices can swiftly and accurately detect the presence of certain nucleotide sequences with high sensitivity and convert the presence of biological components into an understandable electrical signal by combining biosensors with microfluidics-based biochemical analysis. In this study, a specific DNA-probe sequence and PCR primers were designed to be used in a magnetoresistive biosensing platform to amplify the internal transcribed spacer region of the ribosomal DNA of G. pallida. Magnetic nanoparticles were used as the labelling agents of asymmetric PCR product through biotin–streptavidin interaction. Upon target hybridization to sensor immobilized oligo probes, the fringe field created by the magnetic nanoparticles produces a variation in the sensor’s electrical resistance. The detection signal corresponds to the concentration of target molecules present in the sample. The results demonstrate the suitability of the magnetic biosensor to detect PCR target product and the specificity of the probe, which consistently distinguishes G. pallida (DV/V > 1%) from other cyst nematodes (DV/V < 1%), even when DNA mixtures were tested at different concentrations. This shows the magnetic biosensor’s potential as a bioanalytical device for field applications and border phytosanitary inspections.
Description: Funding Information: This research was funded by National Funds through the FCT—Foundation for Science and Technology under the Ph.D. fellowships BD 138724/2018, the project UIDB/05183/2020 (MED–Mediterranean Institute for Agriculture, Environment and Development, Institute for Advanced Studies and Research, Évora University) and the project UID/05367/2020 (PROGRAMATICO—Research Unit INESC MN, Microsystems and Nanotechnologies). Publisher Copyright: © 2023 by the authors.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/158474
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/s23020647
ISSN: 1424-8220
Appears in Collections:Home collection (ITQB)

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