Size-classified monitoring of ATP bioluminescence for rapid assessment of biological distribution in airborne particulates
- Authors
- 오재호; Choi Jisoo; Massoudifarid Milad; Park Ja Young; Hwang Jungho; Lim Jiseok; Byeon Jeong Hoon
- Issue Date
- Aug-2023
- Publisher
- Pergamon Press Ltd.
- Citation
- Biosensors and Bioelectronics, v.234
- Journal Title
- Biosensors and Bioelectronics
- Volume
- 234
- URI
- https://yscholarhub.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.yonsei/23112
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115356
- ISSN
- 0956-5663
1873-4235
- Abstract
- The COVID-19 pandemic ignited massive research into the rapid detection of bioaerosols. In particular, nanotechnology-based detection strategies are proposed as alternatives because of issues in bioaerosol enrichment and lead time for molecular diagnostics; however, the practical implementation of such techniques is still unclear due to obstacles regarding the large research and development effort and investment for the validation. The use of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) bioluminescence (expressed as relative luminescence unit (RLU) per unit volume of air) of airborne particulate matter (PM) to determine the bacterial population as a representative of the total bioaerosols (viruses, bacteria, and fungi) has been raised frequently because of the high reponse speed, resolution, and compatibility with culture-based bioaerosol monitoring. On the other hand, additional engineering attempts are required to confer significance because of the size-classified (bioluminescence for different PM sizes) and specific (bioluminescence per unit PM mass) biological risks of air for providing proper interventions in the case of airborne transmission. In this study, disc-type impactors to cut-off aerosols larger than 1 mu m, 2.5 mu m, and 10 mu m were designed and constructed to collect PM1, PM2.5, and PM10 on sampling swabs. This engineering enabled reliable size-classified bioluminescence signals using a commercial ATP luminometer after just 5 min of air intake. The simultaneous operations of a six-stage Andersen impactor and optical PM spectrometers were conducted to determine the correlations between the resulting RLU and colony forming unit (CFU; from the Andersen impactor) or PM mass concentration (deriving specific bioluminescence).
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Collections - College of Engineering > 공과대학 기계공학부 > 공과대학 기계공학과 > 1. Journal Articles

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