Web Release Date: December 22,
Method of Measuring Bacillus anthracis Spores in the Presence of Copious Amounts of Bacillus thuringiensis and Bacillus cereus
Chemical and Biological Engineering Department, Drexel University, 31st and Market Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Received for review May 29, 2006. Accepted November 15, 2006.
Abstract:
A sensitive and reliable method for the detection of
Bacillus anthracis (BA; Sterne strain 7702) spores in
presence of large amounts of Bacillus thuringiensis
(BT) and Bacillus cereus (BC) is presented based on a
novel PZT-anchored piezoelectric excited millimeter-sized
cantilever (PAPEMC) sensor with a sensing area of 1.5
mm2. Antibody (anti-BA) specific to BA spores was
immobilized on the sensing area and exposed to various
samples of BA, BT, and BC containing the same concentration of BA at 333 spores/mL, and the concentration
of BT + BC was varied in concentration ratios of (BA:BT
+ BC) 0:1, 1:0, 1:1, 1:10, 1:100, and 1:1000. In each
case, the sensor responded with an exponential decrease
in resonant frequency and the steady-state frequency
changes reached were 14 ± 31 (n = 11), 2742 ± 38
(n = 3), 3053 ± 19 (n = 2), 2777 ± 26 (n = 2), 2953
± 24 (n = 2), and 3105 ± 27 (n = 2) Hz, respectively,
in 0, 27, 45, 63, 154, and 219 min. The bound BA
spores were released in each experiment, and the sensor
response was nearly identical to the frequency change
during attachment. These results suggest that the transport of BA spores to the antibody immobilized surface was
hindered by the presence of other Bacillus species. The
observed binding rate constant, based on the Langmuir
kinetic model, was determined to be 0.15 min-1. A
hindrance factor (
) is defined to describe the reduced
attachment rate in the presence of BT + BC and found to
increase exponentially with BT and BC concentration. The
hindrance factor increased from 3.52 at 333 BT + BC
spores/mL to 11.04 at 3.33 × 105 BT + BC spores/mL,
suggesting that
is a strong function of BT and BC
concentration. The significance of these results is that anti-BA functionalized PEMC sensors are highly selective to
Bacillus anthracis spores and the presence of other
Bacillus species, in large amounts, does not prevent
binding but impedes BA transport to the sensor.
Download the full text: PDF | HTML