Advancing In Situ Food Monitoring through a Smart Lab‐in‐a‐Package System Demonstrated by the Detection of Salmonella in Whole Chicken

Author:

Prasad Akansha1ORCID,Khan Shadman1ORCID,Monteiro Jonathan K.2ORCID,Li Jiuxing3ORCID,Arshad Fatima4ORCID,Ladouceur Liane5ORCID,Tian Lei6ORCID,Shakeri Amid5ORCID,Filipe Carlos D. M.6ORCID,Li Yingfu3ORCID,Didar Tohid F.15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedical Engineering McMaster University 1280 Main Street West Hamilton Ontario L8S 4L8 Canada

2. Department of Medicine McMaster University 1280 Main Street West Hamilton Ontario L8N 3Z5 Canada

3. Department of Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences McMaster University 1280 Main Street West Hamilton Ontario L8S 4L8 Canada

4. School of Interdisciplinary Science McMaster University Hamilton Ontario L8S 4L7 Canada

5. Department of Mechanical Engineering McMaster University Hamilton Ontario L8S 4L7 Canada

6. Department of Chemical Engineering McMaster University Hamilton Ontario L8S 4L7 Canada

Abstract

AbstractWith food production shifting away from traditional farm‐to‐table approaches to efficient multistep supply chains, the incidence of food contamination has increased. Consequently, pathogen testing via inefficient culture‐based methods has increased, despite its lack of real‐time capabilities and need for centralized facilities. While in situ pathogen detection would address these limitations and enable individual product monitoring, accurate detection within unprocessed, packaged food products without user manipulation has proven elusive. Herein, “Lab‐in‐a‐Package” is presented, a platform capable of sampling, concentrating, and detecting target pathogens within closed food packaging, without intervention. This system consists of a newly designed packaging tray and reagent‐infused membrane that can be paired universally with diverse pathogen sensors. The inclined food packaging tray maximizes fluid localization onto the sensing interface, while the membrane acts as a reagent‐immobilizing matrix and an antifouling barrier for the sensor. The platform is substantiated using a newly discovered Salmonella‐responsive nucleic acid probe, which enables hands‐free detection of 103 colony forming units (CFU) g−1 target pathogen in a packaged whole chicken. The platform remains effective when contamination is introduced with toolsand surfaces, ensuring widespread efficacy. Its real‐world use for in situ detection is simulated using a handheld fluorescence scanner with smartphone connectivity.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

Reference37 articles.

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2. Foodborne Illness Acquired in the United States—Major Pathogens

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