Affiliation:
1. Departments of Physical Chemistry
2. Infectious Diseases, Israel Institute for Biological Research, Ness-Ziona 74100, Israel
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Development of an ultrasensitive biosensor for biological hazards in the environment is a major need for pollutant control and for the detection of biological warfare. Fluorescence methods combined with immunodiagnostic methods are the most common. To minimize background noise, arising from the unspecific adsorption effect, we have adapted the FRET (frequency resonance energy transfer) effect to the immunofluorescence method. FRET will increase the selectivity of the diagnosis process by introducing a requirement for two different reporter molecules that have to label the antigen surface at a distance that will enable FRET. Utilizing the multiparameter capability of flow cytometry analysis to analyze the double-labeling/FRET immunostaining will lead to a highly selective and sensitive diagnostic method. This work examined the FRET interaction of fluorescence-labeled avidin molecules on biotin-coated microspheres as a model system. As target system, we have used labeled polyclonal antibodies on
Bacillus anthracis
spores. The antibodies used were purified immunoglobulin G (IgG) molecules raised in rabbits against
B. anthracis
exosoporium components. The antibodies were fluorescence labeled by a donor-acceptor chromophore pair, alexa488 as a donor and alexa594 as an acceptor. On labeling the spores with alexa488-IgG as a donor and alexa594-IgG as an acceptor, excitation at 488 nm results in quenching of the alexa-488 fluorescence (
E
q
= 35%) and appearance of the alexa594 fluorescence (
E
s
= 22%), as detected by flow cytometry analysis. The FRET effect leads to a further isolated gate (FL1/FL3) for the target spores compared to competitive spores such as
B. thuringiensis
subsp.
israelensis
and
B. subtilis.
This new approach, combining FRET labeling and flow cytometry analysis, improved the selectivity of the
B. anthracis
spores by a factor of 10 with respect to
B. thuringiensis
subsp.
israelensis
and a factor of 100 with respect to
B. subtilis
as control spores.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
36 articles.
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