Title of article :
Optical biosensor for pharmaceuticals, antibiotics, hormones, endocrine disrupting chemicals and pesticides in water: Assay optimization process for estrone as example
Author/Authors :
Tschmelak، نويسنده , , Jens and Proll، نويسنده , , Guenther and Gauglitz، نويسنده , , Guenter، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
11
From page :
313
To page :
323
Abstract :
Certain contaminants at trace concentrations in surface waters can have dramatic effects on the hormonal system of organisms in the aquatic environment. Therefore, immunoanalytical methods at a very low limit of detection (LOD) and a low limit of quantification (LOQ) are becoming more and more important for environmental analysis and especially for monitoring drinking water quality. Environmental monitoring of antibiotics, hormones, endocrine disrupting chemicals, and pesticides in real water samples (e.g. surface, ground or drinking water) with difficult matrices places high demands on chemical analysis. Biosensors have suitable characteristics such as efficiency in allowing very fast, sensitive, and cost-effective detection. Here we describe an assay optimization process with a fully automated immunoassay for estrone which resulted in a LOD below 0.20 ng L−1 and a LOQ below 1.40 ng L−1. In contrast to common analytical methods such as GC–MS or HPLC–MS, the biosensor used requires no sample pre-treatment and pre-concentration. The very low validation parameters for estrone are the result of the continuous optimization of the immunoassay. The basis of our sensitive assay is the antibody with a high affinity constant towards estrone. During the optimization process, we reduced the amount of antibody per sample and improved the chip surface modification. Finally, this proceeding led to a calibration routine with an amount of antibody of only 3.0 ng per sample (sample volume: 1.0 mL). The reduction of the amount of antibody per sample results in better validation parameters (LOD, LOQ, and IC50), but this reduction leads to the current device-related limitation of the River Analyser (RIANA). me endocrine disrupting compounds, no effect levels (NOELs) in the lower nanogram per liter range are reported. This defines the challenge, which analytical methods have to compete with and our RIANA instrument with its improved sensitivity for the detection of a single hormone in the lower nanogram per liter range is a powerful tool in aquatic analytics in addition to the common analytical methods.
Keywords :
River Analyser (RIANA) , Automated Water Analyser Computer Supported System (AWACSS) , estrogenic compounds , Endocrine disrupting chemicals , Assay optimization , Environmental analysis , hormones
Journal title :
Talanta
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Talanta
Record number :
1646996
Link To Document :
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