Food Biochemistry and Food Processing

(Ben Green) #1
731

Table 31.5.


Comparison between Immunoassay Methods to Detect Foodborne Pathogens


Method

Advantages

Disadvantages

Detection Limit

a

ELISA


  • Simplicity

  • Large quantities of sample required


10

3 –10

5

cfu/mL


  • Detection within a few hours

  • Background levels can be high


Sandwich ELISA


  • Concentrates the antigen

  • Must have a second primary


in the well

antibody for a different


  • Gives a stronger signal


portion of the antigen


  • More time required than basic ELISA


Competitive ELISA


  • Less false positives

  • Must have pure antigen

    • Allows for quantitative results




available

Fluorescently labeled


  • Less time required to

  • More expensive than ELISA


immunoassay

measure signal


  • Specialized equipment required


to analyze results

Fluorescent


  • 30–40 minutes for

  • Expensive chemicals required


500 cfu/mL

immunoassay with

detection after enrichment


  • Trained personnel required


(Dunbar et al.

microsphere sorting


  • Sensitive

  • Computer sorter is


2003)


  • Multiple pathogens can be


specialized and expensive

detected simultaneously

Immunomagnetic assay


  • Time—no enrichment of

  • Expense


1–2 cfu/g

pathogen required


  • Trained personnel required


(Hudson et al.

for assay and conjugation of

2001)

antibody to beads

Latex agglutination


  • No skilled help required

  • Qualitative results only


0.3–222 cfu/g

assay

for assay


  • Enrichment culturing required


(Matar et al.


  • Inexpensive


1997)


  • No specialized equipment


aDetection limits are for

L. monocytogenes
Free download pdf