Publication | Closed Access
Detection of Streptomycin Residues in Whole Milk Using an Optical Immunobiosensor
92
Citations
7
References
2001
Year
EngineeringPathogen DetectionPrecision DairyOptical ImmunobiosensorBioanalysisPasteurized Whole MilkFood MicrobiologyAnalytical ChemistryAnalytical BiotechnologyWhole Milk UsingAntimicrobial ResistanceChromatographyFood SafetyAntimicrobial SusceptibilityBiotechnologyOptical BiosensorStreptomycin ResiduesMicrobiologyMedicine
The development of an assay for the detection of streptomycin residues in pasteurized whole milk using an optical biosensor (Biacore) is reported. Streptomycin-adipic hydrazide coupled to bovine thyroglobulin was used to produce a sheep polyclonal antibody. The antibody displayed excellent cross-reactivity with dihydrostreptomycin (106%). There was no significant cross-reaction with other aminoglycosides or common antibiotics. Streptomycin was also immobilized onto a CM5 sensor chip to provide a stable, reusable surface. The developed assay permitted the direct analysis of whole milk samples ( approximately 3.5% fat) without prior centrifugation and defatting. Results were available in 5 min. The limit of detection of the assay was determined as 4.1 ng/mL, well below the European maximum residue limit (MRL) of 200 ng/mL. Repeatability (or coefficient of variation) between runs was determined as 3.5% (100 ng/mL; 0.5 x MRL), 5.7% (200 ng/mL; MRL), and 7.6% (400 ng/mL; 2 x MRL).
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