Biosensors (Jun 2023)

The Optimization of a Label-Free Electrochemical DNA Biosensor for Detection of <i>Sus scrofa</i> mtDNA as Food Adulterations

  • Yeni Wahyuni Hartati,
  • Irkham Irkham,
  • Iis Sumiati,
  • Santhy Wyantuti,
  • Shabarni Gaffar,
  • Salma Nur Zakiyyah,
  • Muhammad Ihda H. L. Zein,
  • Mehmet Ozsoz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bios13060657
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. 657

Abstract

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Fast, sensitive, and easy-to-use methods for detecting DNA related to food adulteration, health, religious, and commercial purposes are evolving. In this research, a label-free electrochemical DNA biosensor method was developed for the detection of pork in processed meat samples. Gold electrodeposited screen-printed carbon electrodes (SPCEs) were used and characterized using SEM and cyclic voltammetry. A biotinylated probe DNA sequence of the Cyt b S. scrofa gene mtDNA used as a sensing element containing guanine substituted by inosine bases. The detection of probe-target DNA hybridization on the streptavidin-modified gold SPCE surface was carried out by the peak guanine oxidation of the target using differential pulse voltammetry (DPV). The optimum experimental conditions of data processing using the Box–Behnken design were obtained after 90 min of streptavidin incubation time, at the DNA probe concentration of 1.0 µg/mL, and after 5 min of probe-target DNA hybridization. The detection limit was 0.135 µg/mL, with a linearity range of 0.5–1.5 µg/mL. The resulting current response indicated that this detection method was selective against 5% pork DNA in a mixture of meat samples. This electrochemical biosensor method can be developed into a portable point-of-care detection method for the presence of pork or food adulterations.

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