The standard procedure for definitive detection of BoNT-producing Clostridia is a culture method combined with neurotoxin detection using a standard mouse bioassay (MBA). The mouse bioassay is highly sensitive and specific, but it is expensive and time-consuming, and there are ethical concerns due to use of laboratory animals. Cell-based assays provide an alternative to the MBA in screening for BoNT-producing Clostridia. Here, we describe a cell-based assay utilizing a fluorescence reporter construct expressed in a neuronal cell model to study toxin activity in situ. Our data indicates that the assay can detect as little as 100 pM BoNT/A activity within living cells, and the assay is currently being evaluated for the analysis of BoNT in food matrices. Among available in vitro assays, we believe that cell-based assays are widely applicable in high-throughput screenings and have the potential to at least reduce and refine animal assays if not replace it. Copyright © 2013 Uma Basavanna et al.
CITATION STYLE
Basavanna, U., Muruvanda, T., Brown, E. W., & Sharma, S. K. (2013). Development of a cell-based functional assay for the detection of clostridium botulinum neurotoxin types A and e. International Journal of Microbiology, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/593219
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