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Structural switching aptamer-based electrochemical sensor for mycotoxin patulin detection

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Structural switching aptamer-based electrochemical sensor for mycotoxin patulin detection. / Küçük, Netice; Kaya, Şevval; Şahin, Samet et al.
In: Toxicon, Vol. 239, 107583, 23.02.2024.

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Küçük N, Kaya Ş, Şahin S, Çağlayan MO. Structural switching aptamer-based electrochemical sensor for mycotoxin patulin detection. Toxicon. 2024 Feb 23;239:107583. Epub 2024 Jan 25. doi: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2023.107583

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Küçük, Netice ; Kaya, Şevval ; Şahin, Samet et al. / Structural switching aptamer-based electrochemical sensor for mycotoxin patulin detection. In: Toxicon. 2024 ; Vol. 239.

Bibtex

@article{a152212c991f45f59346395076c97b67,
title = "Structural switching aptamer-based electrochemical sensor for mycotoxin patulin detection",
abstract = "In this study, an electrochemical and aptamer-based aptasensor was developed for the sensitive detection of patulin, a mycotoxin commonly found in fruits and fruit-based products. The aptasensor used an innovative structural switching signal-off platform for detecting patulin. The aptamer immobilization on screen-printed carbon electrodes was achieved through Au electrodeposition and thiol group (-SH) route. Response surface methodology was used to determine the optimal incubation times for the aptamer, blocking agent, and target molecule, which were found to be 180 min, 40 min, and 89 min, respectively. The response of the aptamer to different concentrations of patulin was measured using square wave voltammetry by exploiting the structural switching mechanism. The sensor response was determined by quantifying differences in the aptasensor's background current. The aptasensor exhibited a linear working range of 1–25 μM and a low detection limit of 3.56 ng/mL for patulin. The aptasensor's relative standard deviation and accuracy were determined to be 0.067 and 94.4%, respectively. A non-specific interaction was observed at low concentrations of two other mycotoxins, ochratoxin A and zearalenone. The interference from ochratoxin A in the measurements was below 10%. In real sample tests using apple juice, interference, particularly at low concentrations, had changed the recovery of patulin negatively with a significant effect on the structural switching behavior. Nevertheless, at a concentration of 25 ng/mL, the interference effect was eliminated, and the recovery standard deviation improved to 6.6%. The aptasensor's stability was evaluated over 10 days, and it demonstrated good performance, retaining 13.12% of its initial response. These findings demonstrate the potential of the developed electrochemical aptasensor for the sensitive detection of patulin in fruit-based products, with prospects for application in food safety and quality control.",
keywords = "Apple-juice, Aptasensor, Patulin, Square wave voltammetry, Structural switching",
author = "Netice K{\"u}{\c c}{\"u}k and {\c S}evval Kaya and Samet {\c S}ahin and {\c C}ağlayan, {Mustafa Oğuzhan}",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1016/j.toxicon.2023.107583",
language = "English",
volume = "239",
journal = "Toxicon",
issn = "0041-0101",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Structural switching aptamer-based electrochemical sensor for mycotoxin patulin detection

AU - Küçük, Netice

AU - Kaya, Şevval

AU - Şahin, Samet

AU - Çağlayan, Mustafa Oğuzhan

PY - 2024/2/23

Y1 - 2024/2/23

N2 - In this study, an electrochemical and aptamer-based aptasensor was developed for the sensitive detection of patulin, a mycotoxin commonly found in fruits and fruit-based products. The aptasensor used an innovative structural switching signal-off platform for detecting patulin. The aptamer immobilization on screen-printed carbon electrodes was achieved through Au electrodeposition and thiol group (-SH) route. Response surface methodology was used to determine the optimal incubation times for the aptamer, blocking agent, and target molecule, which were found to be 180 min, 40 min, and 89 min, respectively. The response of the aptamer to different concentrations of patulin was measured using square wave voltammetry by exploiting the structural switching mechanism. The sensor response was determined by quantifying differences in the aptasensor's background current. The aptasensor exhibited a linear working range of 1–25 μM and a low detection limit of 3.56 ng/mL for patulin. The aptasensor's relative standard deviation and accuracy were determined to be 0.067 and 94.4%, respectively. A non-specific interaction was observed at low concentrations of two other mycotoxins, ochratoxin A and zearalenone. The interference from ochratoxin A in the measurements was below 10%. In real sample tests using apple juice, interference, particularly at low concentrations, had changed the recovery of patulin negatively with a significant effect on the structural switching behavior. Nevertheless, at a concentration of 25 ng/mL, the interference effect was eliminated, and the recovery standard deviation improved to 6.6%. The aptasensor's stability was evaluated over 10 days, and it demonstrated good performance, retaining 13.12% of its initial response. These findings demonstrate the potential of the developed electrochemical aptasensor for the sensitive detection of patulin in fruit-based products, with prospects for application in food safety and quality control.

AB - In this study, an electrochemical and aptamer-based aptasensor was developed for the sensitive detection of patulin, a mycotoxin commonly found in fruits and fruit-based products. The aptasensor used an innovative structural switching signal-off platform for detecting patulin. The aptamer immobilization on screen-printed carbon electrodes was achieved through Au electrodeposition and thiol group (-SH) route. Response surface methodology was used to determine the optimal incubation times for the aptamer, blocking agent, and target molecule, which were found to be 180 min, 40 min, and 89 min, respectively. The response of the aptamer to different concentrations of patulin was measured using square wave voltammetry by exploiting the structural switching mechanism. The sensor response was determined by quantifying differences in the aptasensor's background current. The aptasensor exhibited a linear working range of 1–25 μM and a low detection limit of 3.56 ng/mL for patulin. The aptasensor's relative standard deviation and accuracy were determined to be 0.067 and 94.4%, respectively. A non-specific interaction was observed at low concentrations of two other mycotoxins, ochratoxin A and zearalenone. The interference from ochratoxin A in the measurements was below 10%. In real sample tests using apple juice, interference, particularly at low concentrations, had changed the recovery of patulin negatively with a significant effect on the structural switching behavior. Nevertheless, at a concentration of 25 ng/mL, the interference effect was eliminated, and the recovery standard deviation improved to 6.6%. The aptasensor's stability was evaluated over 10 days, and it demonstrated good performance, retaining 13.12% of its initial response. These findings demonstrate the potential of the developed electrochemical aptasensor for the sensitive detection of patulin in fruit-based products, with prospects for application in food safety and quality control.

KW - Apple-juice

KW - Aptasensor

KW - Patulin

KW - Square wave voltammetry

KW - Structural switching

U2 - 10.1016/j.toxicon.2023.107583

DO - 10.1016/j.toxicon.2023.107583

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38141970

AN - SCOPUS:85183149724

VL - 239

JO - Toxicon

JF - Toxicon

SN - 0041-0101

M1 - 107583

ER -