Electrochemical Biosensors for Tracing Cyanotoxins in Food and Environmental Matrices

Biosensors (Basel). 2021 Sep 4;11(9):315. doi: 10.3390/bios11090315.

Abstract

The adoption of electrochemical principles to realize on-field analytical tools for detecting pollutants represents a great possibility for food safety and environmental applications. With respect to the existing transduction mechanisms, i.e., colorimetric, fluorescence, piezoelectric etc., electrochemical mechanisms offer the tremendous advantage of being easily miniaturized, connected with low cost (commercially available) readers and unaffected by the color/turbidity of real matrices. In particular, their versatility represents a powerful approach for detecting traces of emerging pollutants such as cyanotoxins. The combination of electrochemical platforms with nanomaterials, synthetic receptors and microfabrication makes electroanalysis a strong starting point towards decentralized monitoring of toxins in diverse matrices. This review gives an overview of the electrochemical biosensors that have been developed to detect four common cyanotoxins, namely microcystin-LR, anatoxin-a, saxitoxin and cylindrospermopsin. The manuscript provides the readers a quick guide to understand the main electrochemical platforms that have been realized so far, and the presence of a comprehensive table provides a perspective at a glance.

Keywords: anatoxin-a; aptamer; cylindrospermopsin; electroanalysis; impedance; microcystin-LR; saxitoxin; screen printed electrodes; voltammetry.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Alkaloids
  • Bacterial Toxins / analysis*
  • Biosensing Techniques
  • Cyanobacteria
  • Cyanobacteria Toxins
  • Environmental Monitoring / methods*
  • Food Analysis / methods*
  • Fresh Water
  • Marine Toxins
  • Microcystins
  • Tropanes
  • Uracil

Substances

  • Alkaloids
  • Bacterial Toxins
  • Cyanobacteria Toxins
  • Marine Toxins
  • Microcystins
  • Tropanes
  • cylindrospermopsin
  • Uracil
  • anatoxin a
  • cyanoginosin LR