Abstract

Screening of foodborne pathogens is important to prevent contaminated foods from their supply chains. In this study, a portable detection device was developed for rapid, sensitive and simple detection of viable Salmonella using a finger-actuated microfluidic chip and an improved recombinase aided amplification (RAA) assay. Improved propidium monoazide (PMAxx) was combined with RAA to enable this device to distinguish viable bacteria from dead ones. The modification of PMAxx into dead bacteria, the magnetic extraction of nucleic acids from viable bacteria and the RAA detection of extracted nucleic acids were performed using the microfluidic chip on its supporting device by finger press-release operations. The fluorescent signal resulting from RAA amplification of the nucleic acids was collected using a USB camera and analyzed using a self-developed smartphone App to quantitatively determine the bacterial concentration. This device could detect Salmonella typhimurium in spiked chicken meats from 1.3 × 102 CFU/mL to 1.3 × 107 CFU/mL in 2 h with a lower detection limit of 130 CFU/mL, and has shown its potential for on-site detection of foodborne pathogens.

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