Cranberry proanthocyanidins-pani nanocomposite for the detection of bacteria associated with urinary tract infections

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Abstract

Consumption of cranberries is associated with the putative effects of preventing urinary tract infections (UTIs). Cranberry proanthocyanidins (PAC) contain unusual double A-type linkages, which are associated with strong interactions with surface virulence factors found on UTI-causing bacteria such as extra-intestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC), depicting in bacterial agglutination processes. In this work, we demonstrated the efficacy of cranberry PAC (200 µg/mL) to aggluti-nate ExPEC (5.0 × 108 CFU/mL) in vitro as a selective interaction for the design of functionalized biosensors for potential detection of UTIs. We fabricated functionalized screen-printed electrodes (SPEs) by modifying with PAC-polyaniline (PANI) nanocomposites and tested the effectiveness of the PAC-PANI/SPE biosensor for detecting the presence of ExPEC in aqueous suspensions. Results indicated that the PAC-PANI/SPE was highly sensitive (limit of quantification of 1 CFU/mL of ExPEC), and its response was linear over the concentration range of 1–70,000 CFU/mL, suggesting cranberry PAC-functionalized biosensors are an innovative alternative for the detection and diagnosis of ExPEC-associated UTIs. The biosensor was also highly selective, reproducible, and stable.

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Urena-Saborio, H., Udayan, A. P. M., Alfaro-Viquez, E., Madrigal-Carballo, S., Reed, J. D., & Gunasekaran, S. (2021). Cranberry proanthocyanidins-pani nanocomposite for the detection of bacteria associated with urinary tract infections. Biosensors, 11(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/BIOS11060199

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