Publication | Closed Access
Direct and Quantitative Detection of Bacteriophage by “Hearing” Surface Detachment Using a Quartz Crystal Microbalance
70
Citations
7
References
2001
Year
Pathogen DetectionQuantitative MicrobiologyQuartz Crystal MicrobalancePhage BiologyBioanalysisBacteriophageProkaryotic VirusMicrobiologyQuantitative DetectionMicrobial VirusMedicineClinical MicrobiologyVirus DetectionBiophysicsAcoustic EmissionPhage CoatHealth Sciences
We show that it is possible to detect specifically adsorbed bacteriophage directly by breaking the interactions between proteins displayed on the phage coat and ligands immobilized on the surface of a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM). This is achieved through increasing the amplitude of oscillation of the QCM surface and sensitively detecting the acoustic emission produced when the bacteriophage detaches from the surface. There is no interference from nonspecifically adsorbed phage. The detection is quantitative over at least 5 orders of magnitude and is sensitive enough to detect as few as 20 phage. The method has potential as a sensitive and low-cost method for virus detection.
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