Abstract

Endotoxin detection is important for determining bacterial contamination and infection in fields of food, pharmaceutical and clinical disease diagnosis. The horseshoe crab deformed cell lysate analysis is regarded as the gold-standard method, but the endangered and high-cost horseshoe crab animals required in sensing process further raise animal ethical issues and hinder their applications. The colorimetric methods based on nanozymes are simple and economical, but the low selectivity and sensitivity are still the bottleneck for their further application. Herein, we successfully developed a phenylboronic acid functionalized iron-based nanozyme with higher selectivity and highly catalytic activity for endotoxin sensing. The as-prepared colorimetric sensor using the obtained nanozyme as sensing probes shows a good linear relationship for endotoxin sensing in the range of 1–20 μg mL−1, with a LOD = 0.42 μg mL−1, along with good selectivity and reproducibility. The sensor can also be well applied to detecting endotoxin in practical samples such as beer and serum. Moreover, the parameters including time and temperature which could affect the endotoxin release from E. coli were also studied and optimized, based on the relationship between endotoxin and Gram-negative bacteria, the as-prepared sensor achieves the qualitative and quantification of E. coli.

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