Abstract

Nowadays, food allergy is a very important health issue, causing adverse reactions of the immune system when exposed to different allergens present in food. Because of this, the development of point-of-use devices using miniaturized, user-friendly, and low-cost instrumentation has become of outstanding importance. According to this, electrochemical aptasensors have been demonstrated as useful tools to quantify a broad variety of targets. In this work, we develop a simple methodology for the determination of β-lactoglobulin (β-LG) in food samples using a folding-based electrochemical aptasensor built on poly-L-lysine modified graphite screen-printed electrodes (GSPEs) and an anti-β-lactoglobulin aptamer tagged with methylene blue (MB). This aptamer changes its conformation when the sample contains β-LG, and due to this, the spacing between MB and the electrode surface (and therefore the electron transfer efficiency) also changes. The response of this biosensor was linear for concentrations of β-LG within the range 0.1–10 ng·mL−1, with a limit of detection of 0.09 ng·mL−1. The biosensor was satisfactorily employed for the determination of spiked β-LG in real food samples.

Highlights

  • Nowadays, allergy to food is a very important global health problem, an emerging topic when talking about food safety [1,2]

  • We present a folding-based aptasensor able to quantify β-lactoglobulin (β-LG) using graphite screen-printed electrodes (GSPEs)

  • The modification was evaluated in all the steps of the modification using cyclic voltammetry at

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Summary

Introduction

Allergy to food is a very important global health problem, an emerging topic when talking about food safety [1,2]. Allergy to food has been recently defined by the European Academy of Allergology and Clinical Immunology [3] and it involves an immune reaction deriving from the intake or other type of interaction with specific food [4,5]. Food allergy is a type I hypersensitivity immunological response against ingested substances that can result in serious health problems [6,7]. The reactions can be caused when even little quantities of food are consumed, usually between 10 and 100 mg [4,8]. An allergic reaction can provoke in some cases anaphylactic shocks, that are life-threatening situations [11]

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