Abstract

This paper reports the detection of okadaic acid (OA) as a Diarrheic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP) toxin with an acoustic wave platform in real-time. According to the FDA, the threshold for safe consumption of shellfish is 20μg of OA for 100g of shellfish tissue. The high gravimetric sensitivity of Love wave acoustic devices allow, in liquid media, immuno-detection thanks to immobilized specific antibodies. The biosensor is composed of two lines, one for the test and one used as a reference. Sensitive films were deposited through a PolyDiMethylSiloxane (PDMS) microfluidic chip. On both lines, anti-okadaic acid antibodies (OA-Ab) and saturating agents were successively injected under continuous flow with controlled flow rate. On the test line, okadaic acid (OA) was injected while an unspecific peptide (6×Histidine, 6×His) was used on the control line. On both lines, polyclonal OA-Ab were re-injected a second time to reveal previously fixed OA on the test line. Measured frequency shifts were three times higher on test lines than on control lines. In these conditions, for only 2μg of OA used for detection, the acoustic wave platform could detect DSP toxins with only 10g of shellfish tissue.

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