Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles Analysis

The antifungal drug natamycin (NAT) is widely used in medicine and in the food industry as preservative E235 for a wide variety of foods. The risk of the development of resistance to NAT and its spread in relation to other polyene antibiotics is fraught with the emergence of incurable infections. Th...

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Main Authors: Maksim A. Burkin, Anastasia G. Moshcheva, Inna A. Galvidis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-07-01
Series:Biosensors
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6374/12/7/493
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author Maksim A. Burkin
Anastasia G. Moshcheva
Inna A. Galvidis
author_facet Maksim A. Burkin
Anastasia G. Moshcheva
Inna A. Galvidis
author_sort Maksim A. Burkin
collection DOAJ
description The antifungal drug natamycin (NAT) is widely used in medicine and in the food industry as preservative E235 for a wide variety of foods. The risk of the development of resistance to NAT and its spread in relation to other polyene antibiotics is fraught with the emergence of incurable infections. This work is devoted to the development of an immunoassay to investigate the prevalence of NAT use for food preservation. Two immunogen designs based on tetanus toxoid, conjugated to NAT through different sites of hapten molecules, were compared in antibody generation. Assay formats using heterologous coating antigens were superior for both antibodies. The ELISA variant demonstrated the highest sensitivity (IC<sub>50</sub> = 0.12 ng/mL), and a limit of detection of 0.02 ng/mL was selected for NAT determination. The optimized extraction procedure provided a recovery rate of 72–106% for various food matrixes with variations below 12%. Cyclodextrins, as well as NAT–cyclodextrin complex formulations, showed no interference with the quantification of NAT. One hundred and six food product brands, including baked goods, wines, beers, drinks, sauces, and yogurts, were tested to assess the prevalence of the undeclared use of NAT as a preservative. The screening examination revealed three positive yogurts with an undeclared NAT incorporation of 1.1–9.3 mg/kg.
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spelling doaj.art-d3cf307796074cf7985c945ba1354a382023-12-01T21:56:59ZengMDPI AGBiosensors2079-63742022-07-0112749310.3390/bios12070493Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles AnalysisMaksim A. Burkin0Anastasia G. Moshcheva1Inna A. Galvidis2I.I. Mechnikov Research Institute for Vaccines and Sera, 105064 Moscow, RussiaI.I. Mechnikov Research Institute for Vaccines and Sera, 105064 Moscow, RussiaI.I. Mechnikov Research Institute for Vaccines and Sera, 105064 Moscow, RussiaThe antifungal drug natamycin (NAT) is widely used in medicine and in the food industry as preservative E235 for a wide variety of foods. The risk of the development of resistance to NAT and its spread in relation to other polyene antibiotics is fraught with the emergence of incurable infections. This work is devoted to the development of an immunoassay to investigate the prevalence of NAT use for food preservation. Two immunogen designs based on tetanus toxoid, conjugated to NAT through different sites of hapten molecules, were compared in antibody generation. Assay formats using heterologous coating antigens were superior for both antibodies. The ELISA variant demonstrated the highest sensitivity (IC<sub>50</sub> = 0.12 ng/mL), and a limit of detection of 0.02 ng/mL was selected for NAT determination. The optimized extraction procedure provided a recovery rate of 72–106% for various food matrixes with variations below 12%. Cyclodextrins, as well as NAT–cyclodextrin complex formulations, showed no interference with the quantification of NAT. One hundred and six food product brands, including baked goods, wines, beers, drinks, sauces, and yogurts, were tested to assess the prevalence of the undeclared use of NAT as a preservative. The screening examination revealed three positive yogurts with an undeclared NAT incorporation of 1.1–9.3 mg/kg.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6374/12/7/493natamycinfood preservative E235polyene antibioticshapten designimmunoassayfood safety
spellingShingle Maksim A. Burkin
Anastasia G. Moshcheva
Inna A. Galvidis
Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles Analysis
Biosensors
natamycin
food preservative E235
polyene antibiotics
hapten design
immunoassay
food safety
title Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles Analysis
title_full Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles Analysis
title_fullStr Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles Analysis
title_short Immunoassay for Natamycin Trace Screening: Bread, Wine and Other Edibles Analysis
title_sort immunoassay for natamycin trace screening bread wine and other edibles analysis
topic natamycin
food preservative E235
polyene antibiotics
hapten design
immunoassay
food safety
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6374/12/7/493
work_keys_str_mv AT maksimaburkin immunoassayfornatamycintracescreeningbreadwineandotherediblesanalysis
AT anastasiagmoshcheva immunoassayfornatamycintracescreeningbreadwineandotherediblesanalysis
AT innaagalvidis immunoassayfornatamycintracescreeningbreadwineandotherediblesanalysis