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Validation of cold plasma treatment for protein inactivation: a surface plasmon resonance-based biosensor study

C Bernard1, A Leduc2, J Barbeau2, B Saoudi3, L'H Yahia1 and G De Crescenzo4,5

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Gas plasma is being proposed as an interesting and promising tool to achieve sterilization. The efficacy of gas plasma to destroy bacterial spores (the most resistant living microorganisms) has been demonstrated and documented over the last ten years. In addition to causing damage to deoxyribonucleic acid by UV radiation emitted by excited species originating from the plasma, gas plasma has been shown to promote erosion of the microorganism in addition to possible oxidation reactions within the microorganism. In this work, we used lysozyme as a protein model to assess the effect of gas plasma on protein inactivation. Lysozyme samples have been subjected to the flowing afterglow of a gas discharge achieved in a nitrogen–oxygen mixture. The efficiency of this plasma treatment on lysozyme has been tested by two different assays. These are an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and a surface plasmon resonance (SPR)-based biosensor assay. The two methods showed that exposure to gas plasma can abrogate lysozyme interactions with lysozyme-specific antibodies, more likely by destroying the epitopes responsible for the interaction. More specifically, two SPR-based assays were developed since our ELISA approach did not allow us to discriminate between background and low, but still intact, quantities of lysozyme epitope after plasma treatment. Our SPR results clearly demonstrated that significant protein destruction or desorption was achieved when amounts of lysozyme less than 12.5 ng had been deposited in polystyrene 96-well ELISA plates. At higher lysozyme amounts, traces of available lysozyme epitopes were detected by SPR through indirect measurements. Finally, we demonstrated that a direct SPR approach in which biosensor-immobilized lysozyme activity is directly measured prior and after plasma treatment is more sensitive, and thus, more appropriate to define plasma treatment efficacy with more certainty.


PACS

87.80.-y Biophysical techniques (research methods)

87.53.-j Effects of ionizing radiation on biological systems

87.14.E- Proteins

87.15.M- Spectra of biomolecules

82.33.Xj Plasma reactions (including flowing afterglow and electric discharges)

87.15.K- Molecular interactions; membrane-protein interactions

Subjects

Instrumentation and measurement

Medical physics

Biological physics

Plasma physics

Chemical physics and physical chemistry

Dates

Issue 16 (21 August 2006)

Received 24 January 2006

Published 4 August 2006



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