Current Research in Food Science (Jan 2022)
Polyaniline-Pectin nanoparticles immobilized paper based colorimetric sensor for detection of Escherichia coli in milk and milk products
Abstract
In the food quality and safety arena, there is a need to develop novel and sustainable methodologies that can help in the prevention of foodborne diseases. Herein, we report the development of a rapid conducting polymer strip-based sensor using Polyaniline-pectin (PANI-PEC) for the detection of Escherichia coli in milk and milk products. Polyaniline-pectin nanoparticles stabilized with biopolymer pectin were synthesized and its characterization studies such as FTIR, UV-Vis spectroscopy, electrical conductivity and particle size analysis were done. The assay parameters were optimized for the selective detection of E. coli in milk and milk products. The concentration of PANI-PEC solution immobilized/strip was optimized to be 3 mg/mL as it exhibited good sensitivity and colour intensity. Based on acid production and selectivity for E.coli, concentrations of media components like lactose, tryptophan, yeast extract, chondroitin sulphate, sodium lauryl sulphate, potassium chloride, tergitol-7, gentamycin sulphate and ampicillin trihydrate were optimized as 0.9, 0.1, 0.45, 0.015, 0.1, 2, 0.0125, 0.00016 and 0.015 respectively and sample volume was optimized to 500 μL. The developed PANI-PEC colorimetric strip-based sensor detects 0.52 ± 0.17 log CFU/mL E. coli within 10: 21 h (h). Further shelf-life study revealed that the developed PANI-PEC colorimetric sensor strips are stable at room temperature up to six months exhibiting the same sensitivity. The results obtained here indicate that this novel and simple paper based colorimetric sensor holds potential for application in food industries as a reliable and rapid method for detection of E. coli in milk and milk products at various stages of production and processing.