Rapid detection of microorganisms in a fish infection microfluidics platform

Yang Sylvia Liu, Yanlin Deng, Chun Kwan Chen, Bee Luan Khoo*, Song Lin Chua*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

13 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Inadequate access to clean water is detrimental to human health and aquatic industries. Waterborne pathogens can survive prolonged periods in aquatic bodies, infect commercially important seafood, and resist water disinfection, resulting in human infections. Environmental agencies and research laboratories require a relevant, portable, and cost-effective platform to monitor microbial pathogens and assess their risk of infection on a large scale. Advances in microfluidics enable better control and higher precision than traditional culture-based pathogen monitoring approaches. We demonstrated a rapid, high-throughput fish-based teleost (fish)-microbe (TelM) microfluidic-based device that simultaneously monitors waterborne pathogens in contaminated waters and assesses their infection potential under well-defined settings. A chamber-associated port allows direct access to the animal, while the transparency of the TelM platform enables clear observation of sensor readouts. As proof-of-concept, we established a wound infection model using Pseudomonas aeruginosa-contaminated water in the TelM platform, where bacteria formed biofilms on the wound and secreted a biofilm metabolite, pyoverdine. Pyoverdine was used as fluorescent sensor to correlate P. aeruginosa contamination to infection. The TelM platform was validated with environmental waterborne microbes from marine samples. Overall, the TelM platform can be readily applied to assess microbial and chemical risk in aquatic bodies in resource-constrained settings.
Original languageEnglish
Article number128572
JournalJournal of Hazardous Materials
Volume431
Online published25 Feb 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Jun 2022

Funding

This research was supported by The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Department of Applied Biology and Chemical Technology Startup Grant (BE2B), Departmental General Research Fund (UALB), One-line account (ZVVV), Environmental and Conservation Fund (ECF-48/2019), Health and Medical Research Fund (HMRF-201903032), and State Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery Fund (1-BBX8). This work was also supported by the City University of Hong Kong (9610430, 7020002, 9667220), Hong Kong Center for Cerebro-Cardiovascular Health Engineering (COCHE). Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (9048206), Pneumoconiosis Compensation Fund Board (9211276) and the CityU Shenzhen Futian Institute

Research Keywords

  • Waterborne pathogen
  • Fish
  • Biofilm
  • Pathogen monitoring
  • Microfluidics

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