Abstract

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR), a highly sensitive and label-free optical biosensing technique, is a powerful tool for studying biomolecular interactions. An immunosensor for rapid, sensitive, and selective detection of Vibrio cholerae on the basis of SPR is reported. Recombinant OmpW antigen (a bacterial outer-membrane protein) of V. cholerae was expressed and purified and raising of polyclonal rabbit anti-OmpW was done. Antibodies were immobilized on a sensor surface and interactions between OmpW protein and the whole cell of V. cholerae with immobilized antibodies were studied in different experiments. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential of anti-OmpW in detection of V. cholerae by developing an immunosensor based on SPR. The results showed high affinity interaction between OmpW and anti-OmpW (K D = 2.4 ± 0.07 × 10−9 M) and SPR signals had a linear relationship with the number of V. cholerae ranging from 1 × 102 to 1 × 107 cells/mL with limit of detection of 50 cells/mL. The specificity of the developed immunoassay was examined using some non-V. cholerae bacteria which did not produce any significant responses. This method is rapid, sensitive, and specific to target V. cholerae with a total analysis time of less than 60 min.

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