Abstract

The rapid and accurate identification of live pathogens with high proliferative ability is in great demand to mitigate foodborne infection outbreaks. Herein, we have developed an ultrasensitive image-based aptasensing array to directly detect live Salmonella typhimurium (S.T) cells. This method relies on the long-range orientation of surfactant-decorated liquid crystals (LCs) and the superiority of aptamers (aptST). The self-assembling of hydrophobic surfactant tails leads to a perpendicular/vertical ordered film at the aqueous/LC interface and signal-off response. The addition of aptST perturbed LCs’ ordering into a planar/tilted state at the aqueous phase due to electrostatic interactions between the surfactant with the aptST, and a signal-on response. Following the conformational switch of aptST in the presence of live S. typhimurium, a relative reversing signal-off response was observed upon the target concentration. This aptasensor could promptly confirm the presence of S. typhimurium without intricate DNA-extraction or pre-enrichment stats over a linear range of 1–1.1 × 106 CFU/mL and a detection limit of 1.2 CFU/mL within ∼30 min. These results were successfully validated using molecular and culture-based methods in spiked-milk samples, with a 92.61–104.61 % recovery value. Meanwhile, the flexibility of this portable sensing platform allows for its development and adoption for the precise detection of various pathogens in food and the environment.

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