aflatoxin-m1 and diacetylfluorescein

aflatoxin-m1 has been researched along with diacetylfluorescein* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for aflatoxin-m1 and diacetylfluorescein

ArticleYear
Spore immobilization and its analytical performance for monitoring of aflatoxin M1 in milk.
    Canadian journal of microbiology, 2014, Volume: 60, Issue:12

    Immobilization of Bacillus megaterium spores on Eppendorf tubes through physical adsorption has been used in the detection of aflatoxin M1 (AFM1) in milk within real time of 45 ± 5 min using visual observation of changes in a chromogenic substrate. The appearance of a sky-blue colour indicates the absence of AFM1 in milk, whereas no colour change indicates the presence of AFM1 in milk at a 0.5 ppb Codex maximum residue limit. The working performance of the immobilized spores was shown to persist for up to 6 months. Further, spores immobilized on 96-well black microtitre plates by physical adsorption and by entrapment on sensor disk showed a reduction in detection sensitivity to 0.25 ppb within a time period of 20 ± 5 min by measuring fluorescence using a microbiological plate reader through the addition of milk and fluorogenic substrate. A high fluorescence ratio indicated more substrate hydrolysis due to spore-germination-mediated release of marker enzymes of spores in the absence of AFM1 in milk; however, low fluorescence ratios indicated the presence of AFM1 at 0.25 ppb. Immobilized spores on 96-well microtitre plates and sensor disks have shown better reproducibility after storage at 4 °C for 6 months. Chromogenic assay showed 1.38% false-negative and 2.77% false-positive results while fluorogenic assay showed 4.16% false-positive and 2.77% false-negative results when analysed for AFM1 using 72 milk samples containing raw, pasteurized, and dried milk. Immobilization of spores makes these chromogenic and fluorogenic assays portable, selective, cost-effective for real-time detection of AFM1 in milk at the dairy farm, reception dock, and manufacturing units of the dairy industry.

    Topics: Adsorption; Aflatoxin M1; Animals; Bacillus megaterium; Biological Assay; Cells, Immobilized; Chromogenic Compounds; Female; Fluoresceins; Fluorescence; Fluorescent Dyes; Food Contamination; Milk; Reproducibility of Results; Spores, Bacterial

2014