view counter

Food safetyFaster way to spot bacteria-tainted food -- and prevent illness

Published 30 January 2014

The regular appearance of food poisoning in the news, including a recent event that led to the recall of more than 33,000 pounds of chicken, drives home the need for better bacterial detection long before meats and produce make it to the dinner table.

The regular appearance of food poisoning in the news, including a recent event that led to the recall of more than 33,000 pounds of chicken, drives home the need for better bacterial detection long before meats and produce make it to the dinner table. On the horizon is a new approach for pathogen screening which is far faster than current commercial methods. Scientists are reporting the technique in the ACS journal Analytical Chemistry.

An ACS release reports that Sibani Lisa Biswal and colleagues note that Salmonella is one of the pathogens most commonly associated with foodborne illness, which can cause fever, diarrhea, and abdominal cramps. An estimated one in six Americans suffer from food poisoning every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Many end up in the hospital, and about 3,000 people die annually.

Conventional methods to detect harmful bacteria in food are reliable and inexpensive, but they can be complicated, time consuming and thus allow contamination to go undetected. Biswal’s team set out to develop a faster method to catch unwanted microbes before they can make people sick.

They used an array of tiny “nanomechanical cantilevers,” anchored at one end, kind of like little diving boards. The cantilevers have peptides attached to them that bind to Salmonella. When the bacteria bind to the peptides, the cantilever arm bends, creating a signal. The screening system rapidly distinguished Salmonella from other types of bacteria in a sample. One of the peptides was even more specific than an antibody, which is considered the gold standard. That peptide could tell eight different types of Salmonella apart from each other. The researchers stated that the technique could be applied to other common food pathogens.

— Read more in Jinghui Wang et al., “Rapid Detection of Pathogenic Bacteria and Screening of Phage-Derived Peptides Using Microcantilevers,” Analytical Chemistry, Article ASAP (13 January 2014) (DOI: 10.1021/ac403437x)

view counter
view counter