Rapid ultra-sensitive and high-throughput bioburden detection: Microfluidics and instrumentation

Date

2022-06-06

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Hasan, Md Sadique, et al. “Rapid Ultrasensitive and High-Throughput Bioburden Detection: Microfluidics and Instrumentation.” Analytical Chemistry 24 (2022): 8683-8692. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c00980

Rights

This document is the unedited Author’s version of a Submitted Work that was subsequently accepted for publication in Analytical Chemistry, copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review. To access the final edited and published work see https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c00980

Subjects

Abstract

Contamination detection often requires lengthy culturing steps to detect low-level bioburden. To increase the rate of detection and decrease the limit of detection (LOD), a system featuring microfluidics and a multichannel fluorometer has been developed. The eight-channel fluorometer enables parallel testing of multiple samples with the LOD as low as <1 cfu/mL. This low-cost system utilizes the slope of fluorescence intensity that serves as the criterion for bioburden detection. The redox indicator dye resazurin is used to monitor the presence of viable cells in this study and is reduced to resorufin with a high quantum yield at 585 nm. The sample under investigation is spiked with resazurin and loaded in a special-design microfluidic cassette, and the rate of change is observed via the fluorometer. The method was validated using primary Escherichia coli culture in comparison with a spectrophotometer which served as the gold standard. An optimized assay based on Luria–Bertani medium was developed. The impact on the assay sensitivity based on incubation and filtration steps was also explored. The assay is shown to pick up inadvertent contamination from test tubes and pipette tips showing its applicability in real-world settings. The data analysis demonstrated a comparable performance of the multichannel fluorometer vis-a-vis the conventional plate reader. The multichannel system is shown to detect bioburden presence in as low as 20 s for bacterial concentrations ≥5 cfu/mL after 6 h of incubation. Considering its portability, low cost, simplicity of operation, and relevant assay sensitivity, the system is well positioned to detect low-level bioburden in the laboratory, pharmaceutical, and field settings.