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Detection of proteinous toxins using the Bio-Threat Alert system, part 3: effects of heat pretreatment and interfering substances

Authors :
Isaac Ohsawa
Hiroshi Sekiguchi
Yasuo Seto
Mieko Kanamori-Kataoka
Yasuo Takayama
Yasuhiro Sano
Kouichiro Tsuge
Hisashi Maruko
Akiyoshi Satoh
Asuka Komano
Shigeharu Yamashiro
Ryoji Sekioka
Source :
Forensic Toxicology. 25:76-79
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2007.

Abstract

We previously reported that the Guardian Bio-Threat Alert (BTA) system could detect (detection limit: about 0.1 μg/ml) staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB), botulinum toxins (BTX) A and B, and ricin, with no interference by white-powdered materials or colored matrices. In this study, the capability of the BTA system was further assessed. With 10 min of preheating at 60°C, all toxins could be detected, but with preheating at 80°C, BTX A and B and ricin became undetectable. About 20% SEB could be detected after heating at 80°C, but this detection ability was completely removed after heating at 100°C. The effects of chemicals usually used for decontamination, such as sodium hypochlorite, hydrogen peroxide, formaldehyde, and sodium nitrite, on the detectability of SEB, BTX A, or ricin in the BTA system were also tested. The concentrations giving 50% line intensity for SEB, BTX A, and ricin were 3.1, 11, and 15 μM for sodium hypochlorite and 88, 210, and 60 mM for formaldehyde, respectively. The addition of hydrogen peroxide or sodium nitrite did not decrease the detectability even when used at high concentrations.

Details

ISSN :
18608973 and 18608965
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Forensic Toxicology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........692a378e00366f83c518f57cb2feee57