4.7 Article

Challenging genosensors in food samples: The case of gluten determination in highly processed samples

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages 490-495

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2015.09.017

Keywords

Gluten quantification; Wheat; Celiac disease; Highly processed food; Electrochemical genosensor; Disposable electrodes

Funding

  1. Universidad Complutense de Madrid
  2. European Regional Development Fund
  3. [CTQ2012-31157]

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Electrochemical genosensors have undergone an enormous development in the last decades, but only very few have achieved a quantification of target content in highly processed food samples. The detection of allergens, and particularly gluten, is challenging because legislation establishes a threshold of 20 ppm for labeling as gluten-free but most genosensors expresses the results in DNA concentration or DNA copies. This paper describes the first attempt to correlate the genosensor response and the wheat content in real samples, even in the case of highly processed food samples. A sandwich-based format, comprising a capture probe immobilized onto the screen-printed gold electrode, and a signaling probe functionalized with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), both hybridizing with the target was used. The hybridization event was electrochemically monitored by adding an anti-FITC peroxidase (antiFITC-HRP) and its substrate, tetramethylbenzidine. Binary model mixtures, as a reference material, and real samples have been analyzed. DNA from food was extracted and a fragment encoding the immunodominant peptide of alpha 2-gliadin amplified by a tailored PCR. The sensor was able to selectively detect toxic cereals for celiac patients, such as different varieties of wheat, barley, rye and oats, from non-toxic plants. As low as 0.001% (10 mg/kg) of wheat flour in an inert matrix was reliably detected, which directly compete with the current method of choice for DNA detection, the real-time PCR. A good correlation with the official immunoassay was found in highly processed food samples. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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