4.6 Article

Waterborne pathogen detection using Raman spectroscopy

Journal

APPLIED SPECTROSCOPY
Volume 62, Issue 1, Pages 1-9

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1366/000370208783412546

Keywords

Raman chemical imaging spectroscopy; Bacillus atrophaeus; Bacillus thuringiensis; E. coli; Yersinia; confusion matrix; principal components analysis; PCA; water matrix; laser power density; biological discrimination; proteins; bacteria; recipe tap water

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Raman spectroscopy is being evaluated as a candidate technology for waterborne pathogen detection. We have investigated the impact of key experimental and background interference parameters on the bacterial species level identification performance of Raman detection. These parameters include laser-induced photodamage threshold, composition of water matrix, and organism aging in water. The laser-induced photodamage may be minimized by operating a 532 ran continuous wave laser excitation at laser power densities below 2300 W/cm(2) for Gram-positive Bacillus atrophaeus (formerly Bacillus globigii, BG) vegetative cells, 2800 W/cm(2) for BG spores, and 3500 W/cm(2) for Gram-negative E. coli (EC) organisms. In general, Bacillus spore microorganism preparations may be irradiated with higher laser power densities than the equivalent Bacillus vegetative preparations. In order to evaluate the impact of background interference and organism aging, we selected a biomaterials set comprising Gram-positive (anthrax simulants) organisms, Gram-negative (plague simulant) organisms, and proteins (toxin simulants) and constructed a Raman signature classifier that identifies at the species level. Subsequently, we evaluated the impact of tap water and storage time in water (aging) on the classifier performance when characterizing B. thuringiensis spores, BG spores, and EC cell preparations. In general, the measured Raman signatures of biological organisms exhibited minimal spectral variability with respect to the age of a resting suspension and water matrix composition. The observed signature variability did not substantially degrade discrimination performance at the genus and species levels. In addition, Raman chemical imaging spectroscopy was used to distinguish a mixture of BG spores and EC cells at the single cell level.

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