Design and Application of an Imprinted Polymer Sensor for the Dual Detection of Antibiotic Contaminants in Aqueous Samples and Food Matrices

Oliver D. Jamieson, Jérémy Bell, Alexander Hudson, Joshua Saczek, Victor Pérez-Padilla, Gustavo Kaiya, Katarina Novakovic, Matthew Davies, Emma Foster, Jonas Gruber, Knut Rurack, Marloes Peeters*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

An innovative polymer-based dual detection microfluidic platform has been developed for the accurate and reliable sensing of trace amounts of antibiotic tetracycline in environmental and food samples. This was achieved through the production of a bespoke polymeric material formed via an imprinting technique using a fluorescent dye. Thus, this enables dual detection of tetracycline, both thermally, via analyzing the heat-transfer resistance at the solid-liquid interface, and optically, through the inner filter effect. The combination of these two methods achieved a nanomolar limit of detection for tetracycline while also providing rapid, selective, and cost-effective sensing. Additionally, this method successfully detected tetracycline levels of 0.56 μM in blank egg samples which was significantly lower than the maximum residual level of 400 μg L-1 (0.9 μM). Our work shows that this approach can be used for the efficient detection of trace antibiotics in complex environmental and food samples, offering enhanced reliability through the integration of two complementary analysis techniques. This sensor has the potential to identify sources of antimicrobial resistance, which is crucial for targeted efforts to combat this pressing global health challenge.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2265-2273
Number of pages9
JournalACS Applied Polymer Materials
Volume7
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 Feb 2025

Keywords

  • antibiotic monitoring
  • flow cell.
  • fluorescence
  • heat-transfer method
  • molecularly imprinted polymers
  • tetracycline

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