Abstract
Combining surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) of aggregated graphene oxide/gold nanoparticle hybrids with immunomagnetic bead sample preparation method, a highly sensitive strategy to determine the clenbuterol content in animal urine was developed. Based on a linear calibration curve of the SERS characteristic peak intensity of clenbuterol at Δv = 1474 cm−1 versus the spiked clenbuterol concentration in the range of 0.5–20 ng·mL−1, the quantity of clenbuterol in real animal urine samples can be determined and matches well with those determined by LC-MS/MS, while the detection time is significantly reduced to 15 min/sample. The limits of detection and quantification in the urine are 0.5 ng·mL−1 and 1 ng·mL−1, respectively, and the recovery clenbuterol rates are 82.8–92.4% with coefficients of variation <9.4%. The day-to-day variation of the detection is less than 6.41%, and the shelving life of the SERS substrates is no less than 4 weeks. All these indicate that this proposed SERS detection protocol for clenbuterol is reproducible, reliable, and can be easily developed for the routine monitoring of the illicit use of clenbuterol in animal farming.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Clenbuterol is a kind of β2-adrenergic agonist which is used to adjust bronchiectasis and smooth muscle relaxation1. It has also been used to produce leaner meat with a higher muscle to fat ratio for livestock, and is often called “lean meat powder” in China2. It is prohibited for use in food producing animals in both USA, European Union3, and China4. Even with strict regulations, cases of illegal use of clenbuterol still emerged, such as the Shenzhen snake-clenbuterol event in 20105, the Shuanghui “lean meat powder” event in 20116, and the β-agonists events reported in 20127. The residues of clenbuterol remained in meat tissues consumed by a person may cause increased heart rate, muscular tremors, headaches, nausea, fever and chills. Generally, the main method to monitor the illegal use of clenbuterol in animal farming is to detect the residue of the drug from animal urine using analytical methods such as gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS)8 and liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS)9. Though very effective and accurate, the above mentioned methods require complicated sample pretreatment steps such as solid phase extraction (SPE) clean-up and derivatization reaction operation, which all need expensive instruments and demand experienced personal.
Recently, many rapid screening methods have been proposed for clenbuterol detection, such as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique10,11, immunochromatographic assay based on up-conversion phosphors12, fluorescent multi-component immuno chromatography13 and surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS)14,15. SERS is an emerging and powerful spectroscopic sensing technique based on the enhanced local electromagnetic field near the nanostructured noble metal surfaces16,17. Compared to conventional Raman spectroscopy, SERS can enhance the normal Raman signal up to 106–1012 times, and sometime can even reach a signal molecule sensitivity18,19. However, there are few reports in literature addressing clenbuterol detection using SERS. Lorenzo et al. detected clenbuterol using SERS and investigated the absorption and aggregation of clenbuterol on Au and Ag nanoparticles at different pH values20. It was found that the adsorption of clenbuterol molecules was more effective on gold nanoparticles under acidic condition based on the direct interaction of the aromatic or aliphatic moieties through ionic or coordination bonds with the metal. But the sensitivity was low, with a limit of detection (LOD) of 35 ng·mL−1. Zhu et al. reported a SERS detection of clenbuterol based on a competitive SERS immunoassay with a LOD of 0.1 pg·mL−1 15. The SERS probe was gold nanoparticle labeled by 4,4′- dipyridyl and clenbuterol antibody, and the detection was carried out by competitive binding between free clenbuterol and the antibody labeled SERS nanoprobe substrates. The method was ultrasensitive but the preparation of functional SERS probes was relatively complicated. Xie et al. prepared a modified AuMBA@Ag - Antibody probe (the notation “AuMBA@Ag” refers to the polyclonal antibody of clenbuterol labeled Au-Ag core-shell nanoparticles sandwiched with a Raman reporter 4-mercaptobenzoic acid (MBA)) and demonstrated a LOD of 0.24 pg·mL−1 for quantitative detection of clenbuterol from urine14. Thus, SERS can be used as a rapid, simple, and ultrasensitive analytical method for detecting clenbuterol in urine samples.
In this study, we designed a unique hybrid graphene oxide/Au nanoparticle(GO/AuNPs) SERS probe for clenbuterol detection from urine sample.The hybrid probe was stable within four weeks under 4 °C storage temperature, and the LOD and the limit of quantitation (LOQ) based on SERS for real urine sample were 0.5 ng·mL−1 and 1 ng·mL−1, respectively. A sufficient linearity (R2 = 0.976) was found in the concentration range of 1–20 ng·mL−1 in urine, and the recoveries of clenbuterol from spiked urine samples were in the range of 82.8–92.4% with relative standard deviation (RSD) values in range of 0.81–4.32% (n=6). The total detection time was approximately 15 min/sample.
Results and Discussion
The general clenbuterol detection strategy can be divided into the following three steps as shown in Fig. 1: the preparation of immune-magnetic beads, the synthesis of GO/AuNPs hybrids, and a sample pretreatment and SERS measurement procedure. And some of the details are described in the “Materials and Methods” section. Below we discuss the most important results obtained.
Characterization of GO/AuNPs hybrids
A photograph of the suspensions of AuNPs, untreated GO/AuNPs, and reoxizided GO/AuNPs is shown in Fig. 2(a). Both AuNPs and untreated GO/AuNPs have similar wine red color while the reoxidized GO/AuNPs shows a light red color, which means the absorbance peak wavelength of reoxidized GO/AuNPs has significantly red shifted, which is confirmed by the UV-Vis absorbance spectra shown in Fig. 2(b). Both AuNPs and untreated GO/AuNPs have a similar absorbance peak at λ0 = 530 nm, which is a typical localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) wavelength of AuNPs21. Since the untreated GO/AuNPs have the same LSPR wavelength as that of AuNPs, the AuNPs are either loosely attached on the GO sheets or not aggregate into closely packed AuNP clusters. The LSPR wavelength of the reoxidized GO/AuNPs red shifts to λ0 = 580 nm. Such a significant red shift could be due to the clustering of AuNPs or due to the plasmonic coupling between AuNPs and GO sheets22. However, the TEM images shown in Fig. 2(c) confirm that even there are AuNP clusters on GO sheets, the amount of AuNP clusters is rare. Therefore, such a red shift could be due to the plasmonic coupling between AuNPs and GO sheets - the reoxidization process made the AuNPs anchor more closely to the surface of GO sheets.
In fact reoxidized GO/AuNPs show the best SERS performance for detecting clenbuterol. 20 ng·mL−1 clenbuterol standard solution was used to evaluate the SERS performance of different solutions to detect clenbuterol, see Fig. 2(d). The most intense SERS peaks of the clenbuterol standard solution were at Δv = 1265, 1474, and 1602 cm−1, respectively. The Δv = 1474 cm−1 peak corresponds to the in-plane stretching vibrations coupled with the anilinic C-N stretching vibration; the Δv = 1602 cm−1 peak is assigned to the C=C stretching band of the aromatic ring, and the Δv = 1265 cm−1 peak results from the anilinic C-N stretching coupled with in-plane ring deformations20. The SERS peak intensity I1474 at Δv = 1474 cm−1 is 2986 counts for the reoxidized GO/AuNPs, as compared to 88 counts for the GO/AuNPs. Thus, the second oxidization treatment is indeed very necessary to improve the SERS detection sensitivity. Therefore, we choose the reoxidized GO/AuNPs for the clenbuterol detection.
SERS detection of clenbuterol
The LOD of SERS on clenbuterol detection has been evaluated through the SERS measurements of different concentrations of clenbuterol standard solutions C = 1, 2, 5, 10, and 20 ng·mL−1 (n = 6) and clenbuterol inoculated urine samples. Figure 3(a) shows the average spectra of clenbuterol standard solutions. As one can see, the control sample shows significant peaks at Δv = 1236, 1325, 1532, and 1593 cm−1. Those peaks may correspond to the vibrations of the solvent molecules or the background in the control samples. However, for all the spectra of clenbuterol, the three characteristic peaks at Δv = 1265, 1474, and 1602 cm−1 appear, and the intensities of these peaks increase as the C increases. To quantify the SERS peak intensity and clenbuterol concentration, we plot the peak intensity at Δv = 1474 cm−1, I1474, as a function of C in Fig. 3(b). Clearly I1474 versus C follows a linear relationship, and a liner fit shown as the solid line in Fig. 3(b) gives a slope of 71.7 counts·mL/ng, which corresponding to the sensitivity of SERS detection. The sensitivity for the standard solution is 0.014 ng·mL−1/intensity count. The limit of detection (LOD) is the lowest concentration at which I1474 is significantly larger than that from a control sample. We use 3-sigma rule of the SERS spectra from a control sample to set the cut-off I1474: the average SERS intensity value at Δv = 1474 cm−1 plus three times the standard deviation of SERS intensity of the control sample23. Similarly, the limit of quantification (LOQ) is determined from the average SERS intensity at Δv = 1474 cm−1 plus ten times the standard deviation of SERS intensity of a control sample. From our measurements for the purified clenbuterol solution, LOD is approximately 0.5 ng·mL−1 and the LOQ is1 ng·mL−1.
The LOD from urine sample is determined by three primary factors, the clenbuterol extraction efficiency from urine, the potential interference from contaminants in the extracted sample, and the intrinsic SERS detection LOD of pure clenbuterol. Urine samples are complex matrices containing multiple contents, such as urea, creatinine, uric acid, and small proteins. Many of them could generate SERS signals if not removed, and will introduce interference for clenbuterol detection. In order to remove the interference in the urine and obtain clenbuterol SERS spectra with a high signal-to-noise ratio, we use the Ab-MBs to extract the clenbuterol molecules from urine. For such an extraction process, the incubation time t and the elution frequency play the most important roles. The incubation is required to allow the clenbuterol antibodies on the magnetic beads to have enough time to capture the clenbuterol molecules in urine as much as possible. To investigate the effect of the incubation time on SERS detection of clenbuterol from urine, the urine sample inoculated with 1 ng·mL−1 of clenbuterol was used with a fixed washing time N = 6 and the Ab-MBs incubation time in urine samples was varied as t = 1, 2, 5, 10, 15, and 20 min, respectively. The SERS intensity (I1474) of the extracted clenbuterol as a function of t is plotted in Fig. 4(a). Initially I1474 increases almost linearly with t. When t = 10 min, I1474 reaches a maximum. Further increase of t does not increase the SERS intensity. Therefore, t = 10 min is the optimum incubation time. The elution is required to further remove contaminants in the Ab-MBs extracted from urine. Such a process not only can reduce the contaminants, but also could remove captured clenbuterol on Ab-MBs. Therefore, there must be an optimal elusion frequency to retain most of the clenbuterol while to remove most of the contaminants. By keeping the same inoculated urine sample and fixing t = 10 min, the relationship between the SERS intensity I1474 and the elusion frequency N (the Ab-MBs were eluded with N = 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, or 8 aliquots of 1.5 mL of DI water) was investigated, and is plotted in Fig. 4(b). Clearly N= 6 is the optimal elution frequency.
Under the optimal sample treatment condition, t =10 min and N = 6, the quantitative relationship between the SERS spectra of the extracted clenbuterol and the inoculated clenbuterol concentration C = 0.5, 1, 2, 5, 10, and 20 ng·mL−1, respectively, in urine was investigated. Figure 5(a) shows the clenbuterol concentration dependent SERS spectra, and they show all the characteristic peaks of clenbuterol SERS as compared to Fig. 2(a). However, compared to Fig. 2(a), the spectra in Fig. 5(a) have more background noise. When plot the I1474 as a function of C, as shown in Fig. 5(b), a linear relationship is also obtained, like Fig. 3(b). Such a linear relationship demonstrates that the proposed SERS method can still quantitatively determine the amount of clenbuterol in urine. A linear fitting reveals that the slope is 47.4 counts·mL/ng, which is about 2/3th of the value (71.7 counts·mL/ng) obtained from Fig. 3(b). Such a difference indicates that background matrix in urine samples is affecting the detection. To eliminate the effect of the matrix in the proposed method, matrix-matched calibration standard curves were selected to quantify clenbuterol in the urine samples. Therefore, for practical application of the SERS detection method, we will use Fig. 5(b) as the calibration curve to account for the effect of background in urine. The sensitivity for the urine samples is 0.021 ng·mL−1/intensity count, which is comparable to that of the standard solution. Based on the previously stated criteria, we determine that the LOD is approximately 0.5 ng·mL−1 and the LOQ is 1 ng·mL−1 for the inoculated urine samples.
Validation of the proposed method with real urine samples
The practical application of the proposed SERS method for clenbuterol detection is validated using the real urine samples. 40 different urine samples from sheep, pig, and cow obtained from the Chinese National Feed Supervision from 2012–2014, previously tested by LC-MS/MS9, were used for SERS measurements. We adapted the optimal Ab-MBs treatment methods, identified the SERS peak intensity I1474, applied the LOD criteria, and used Fig. 5(b) as the calibration curve. The results are summarized in Table 1. Comparing to LC-MS/MS method, SERS can identify all the positive and negative urine samples with 100% accuracy. For all the positive samples, the SERS predicted clenbuterol concentration CSERS in urine is very close to those determined by LC-MS/MS, CLC-MS. Figure 6 plots CSERS versus CLC-MS. Clearly the data follows a linear relationship with a slope of ~1.1. In all the cases, SERS gave a slightly higher concentration than that determined by LC-MS/MS. However, a slope of 1.1 demonstrates that SERS results are highly correlated to LC-MS/MS results.
Addressing practical concerns of the SERS assay
To further validate the SERS detection method, clenbuterol recoveries experiment were carried. The urine samples spiked with 1, 2, 5, 10, and 20 ng·mL−1 of clenbuterol were prepared. We adapted the optimal Ab-MBs treatment methods to remove the interferences of the urine samples, and did the SERS measurement as mentioned above. The analysis results was expressed as “detected values” (ng·mL−1). The recoveries values were the ratio between the detected values and the spiked values. The recoveries were found to be 92.4, 83.4, 91.5, 88.4, and 82.8%, respectively (Table 2). These results indicate that the SERS based clenbuteral method is reliable and is fully compatible with the standards recommended by EU24.
Two other critical issues for SERS to be used as a practical sensor are the reproducibility of SERS substrates and their shelf time. In our study, the protocols for the preparation of the GO/AuNPs hybrids substrate were well controlled. For example, the GO/AuNPs hybrids substrate storage conditions (Fig. S1, Supporting Information), the vortexing duration of the GO/AuNPs hybrids before use (Fig. S2, Supporting Information), the vortexing time for sample mixing (Fig. S3, Supporting Information), and the cleaning of the glass bottles used for the SERS detection (Fig. S4, Supporting Information), are the main factors influencing the aggregation of the GO/AuNPs hybrids and affecting the reproducibility of the SERS measurements, and we have set a strict protocol based on all these results. Once the protocol has been followed, the intensity of the clenbuterol characteristic peak at Δv = 1474 cm−1 is very stable when GO/AuNPs hybrids was stored under 4 °C for at least 4 weeks. In addition, the inter- and intra- day detection precisions of the SERS detection method were determined for urine samples spiked with 2 ng·mL−1 of clenbuterol, and the results are summarized in Table 3.The relative standard deviation (RSD) was used to indicate the reproducibility of the detection results, and were found to be in between 2.89% and 6.41%. These low RSD values demonstrate that the proposed SERS method is highly reproducible and reliable.
Specificity of clenbuterol detection
The specificity of the present method was explored against two other kinds of β2-adrenergic agonists: ractopamine and salbutamol, which are the common “lean meat powder” that could coexist in animal urine samples. Fig. S5 of Supporting Information shows the standard SERS spectra of clenbuterol, ractopamine and salbutamol with the concentrations of 10 ng·mL−1. The SERS spectrum of ractopamine has two characteristic peaks at Δv = 650 and 838 cm−1 while salbutamol shows two characteristic peaks at Δv = 950 and 1048 cm−1, respectively. These characteristic peaks are similar to those reported in the literatures20,25,26, but are very different from the characteristic peaks of the clenbuterol (Δv = 1265, 1474, and 1602 cm−1), as summarized in Table S1 of the Supporting Information. Thus, one could use the presence of these characteristic peaks to assess the specificity of the proposed detection method. Five mixtures of clenbuterol, ractopamine, and salbutamol in real urine samples with the equal concentrations of 1, 2, 5, 10, and 20 ng·mL−1 for each individual agonist respectively, were used in the specificity test. After the Ab-MBs treatment, the SERS spectra were shown in Fig. S6(a) of Supporting Information. Only the three clenbuterol peaks dominate the spectra and no characteristic peaks of ractopamine and salbutamol are presented, due to the high specific binding efficiency of Ab-MBs treatment. In addition, Fig. S6(b) shows the SERS intensity of the Δv = 1474 cm−1 peak versus the clenbuterol concentration, and the sensitivity is 0.020 ng·mL−1/intensity count, which is almost the same as those shown in Fig. 5(b). Therefore, the qualitative and quantitative analysis of clenbuterol in urine samples were not affected by ractopamine and salbutamol. All the results indicated that this method has a high specificity for the detection of clenbuterol in real urine samples.
Materials and Methods
Materials and reagents
The non-contaminated urine samples used in the study were obtained from Small Tailed Han Sheep and were tested by LC-MS/MS. Clenbuterol hydrochloride and clenbuterol monoclonal antibody were purchased from Dr. Ehrenstorfer GmbH and Kwinbon Biotechnology, respectively. Chloroauric acid tetrahydrate (HAuCl4·4H2O, analytical grade, >99.9%) and sodium citrate (analytical grade) were acquired from the Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd.Graphene Oxide (GO) solution (1 g·L−1, XFNANO Co., Ltd.), carboxylic acid-magnetic beads (2.8 μm diameter, 30 mg·mL−1, Life Technologies, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.), analytical grade bovine serum albumin (BSA), 2-(N-Morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid (MES), 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC), N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS), and all other chemicals from Sigma Aldrich Co., Ltd. were used as received. Ultra-pure water (Milli-Q, Millipore Corp.) was used in all experiments. All of the glass vials were cleaned using a concentrated piranha solution (95% sulfuric acid/30% hydrogen peroxide solution, v/v = 7:3), then rinsed twice using ultra-pure water, and dried for 2 h under airflow in an oven at 100 °C.
Preparation of immunomagnetic beads
To activate the immunomagnetic beads, 100 μL carboxylic acid-magnetic beads thoroughly resuspended were washed by adding 100 μL of a 25 mM MES buffer solution at pH 5 and incubated for 10 min, and a 50 μL aliquot of 50 mg·mL−1NHS solution and a 50 μL aliquot of the well-mixed suspension of 50 mg·mL−1 EDC solution (in a cold buffer solution) were added. The solution was incubated with vortex mixer at ambient temperature for 30 min. After incubation, magnetic beads were separated from the solution, and were washed twice. Then, a 10 μL aliquot of the clenbuterol monoclonal antibody was added to the magnetic beads, and 25 mM MES buffer (pH = 5) was added, to a final volume of 100 μL. The solution was incubated for no less than 30 min at ambient temperature with a vortex mixer. Finally, the antibody functionalized magnetic beads (Ab-MBs) were collected from the solution.
To block any unreacted carboxylic acid groups, the Ab-MBs were incubated in a 100 μL 50 mM Tris buffer solution at pH = 7.4 for 15 min and washed four times in Tris buffer. The resulting beads were resuspended in 200 μL phosphate buffer solution (PBS) solution and were stored in the dark at 2–8 °C for three months.
Synthesis of GO/AuNPs hybrids
20 mL 0.2 g·L−1 GO solution was added to 20 mL 30% H2O2 solution at room temperature, followed by stirring for 4 h under ultraviolet light excitation (Portable ultraviolet radiation light, WFH-204B, 254 nm, 50 HZ). The resulting 3.5 mL GO solution were mixed with 350 μL 1 wt % aqueous sodium citrate and 40 mL distilled water in a 100 mL Erlenmeyer flask. With 800 rpm vigorous stirring the solution was heated to reflux, and 500 μL 1 wt % HAuCl4 was added within 2 s. The solution remained under reflux for another 10 min, then the heating source was removed while the solution was kept continuously stirring and cooled down to ambient temperature within 10 min. The resultant GO/AuNPs hybrids were washed twice by distilled water after centrifugation at 2800 rpm for 5 min (DAIHAN WiseSpin CF-10), and were stored at 4 °C for no longer than four weeks (the storage time on SERS response is shown in Fig. S1, Supporting Information). The GO/AuNPs were characterized by a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) (Hitachi H-7500) and a UV-Vis spectrometer (Shimadzu UV-2700). Before use, the GO/AuNPs were gently vortexed for 1 min (the effect of vortexing time on SERS response is shown in Fig. S2, Supporting Information).
Sample pretreatment
A 50 μL Ab-MB stock solution was washed twice with 1.5 mL deionized (DI) water, then mixed with a 2 mL urine sample. After shaking the tube for 60 s, the mixture was incubated at ambient temperature for 10 min and washed six times with 1.5 mL DI water. Finally, 1 mL HNO3 (1 wt %) was added, and the Ab-MBs were extracted by a permanent magnet. The remained solution was used for SERS measurements and detection.
SERS measurement
60 μL of above solution was gently mixed with 600 μL GO/AuNPs for 10 s (Fig. S3, Supporting Information), then the suspension was analyzed by a portable Raman spectrophotometer (Raman Tracer-200-HS) at 200 mW power and 10 s exposure time with an incident laser wavelength of 785 nm and a spectral resolution of 4 cm−1. Each spectrum was an average of two scans.
Data analysis
The SERS spectra ranging from 500–2500 cm−1 were analyzed using the RamanAnalyzer software (OptoTrace Technologies, Inc.). The spectra baseline was offset using the Savitzky-Golay second derivative transformation27. Other pre-processing algorithms, such as polynomial subtraction and smoothening, were also used.
Ethics Statement
The study was approved by the Animal Research Ethics Committee of Chinese Ministry of Agriculture and supported by a special fund for Chinese Agro-scientific Research in the Public Interest (No. 201203088-1). The whole experiment was carried out in accordance with the guidelines of the animal experiment and some relevant bulletins published by the ministry of agriculture of the People’s Republic of China. The urine samples were obtained from the Chinese National Feed Supervision Mission from 2012–2014.
Conclusions
SERS is an emerging analytical technique with satisfactory performance in the detection of trace amount of targeted analyte. Herein, based on a unique GO/AuNPs hybrids, a rapid, selective, and sensitive SERS method combined with immunomagnetic was developed to detect the clenbuterol content in animal urine. We demonstrated that based on a linear calibration curve of the SERS characteristic peak intensity of clenbuterol at Δv = 1474 cm−1 versus the spiked clenbuterol concentration, the quantity of clenbuterol in real animal urine samples can be determined. These results matched well with those determined by LC-MS/MS. The limits of detection and quantification for detecting clenbuterol from the urine samples were 0.5 ng·mL−1 and 1 ng·mL−1, respectively, and the recovery clenbuterol rates were 82.8–92.4% with coefficients of variation <9.4%. Furthermore, the day-to-day variation of the detection was less than 6.41%, and the shelving life of the SERS substrates is no less than 4 weeks.
Currently, the Chinese government surveys the illicit use of clenbuterol in animal farming using the GC-MS or LC-MS/MS methods. These standard methods not only require time-consuming sample pretreatment, with approximately 30 min/sample, but also need expensive chromatography instruments operated by experienced, well-trained personal. The SERS method we developed here only require a portable Raman instrument and the specific designed Ab-MBs & GO/AuNP assays with similar sensitivity, while the total detection time is only approximately 15 min/sample. Thus, the proposed SERS method holds a great promise for field-based clenbuterol detection in animal farming.This protocol could be developed for routine on-site monitoring of urine for the purposes of government and market surveillance.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Cheng, J. et al. Highly Sensitive Detection of Clenbuterol in Animal Urine Using Immunomagnetic Bead Treatment and Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy. Sci. Rep. 6, 32637; doi: 10.1038/srep32637 (2016).
References
Philipson, L. H. β-Agonists and metabolism. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 110, 313–317 (2002).
Cheng, J., Wang, S. & Su, X. O. Simultaneous identification and quantification of 20 β-receptor agonists in feed using gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Plos One 8, e76400 (2013).
Commission European, Council Directive; 1996/96/23/;EC, Off. J. Eur. Commun. L125, 3–9.
The NO. 176 announcement from the ministry of agriculture of the People’s Republic of China. (2002).
Shenzhen Special Zone Daily. 13 people eating snake containing clenbuterol appeared poisoning symptoms in Shenzhen. Shenzhen Special Zone Daily report. (2010) Available at: http://news.xinhuanet.com/politics/2010-09/09/c_12534623.htm. (Accessed: 9 September 2010).
China Network Television. Shuanghui “lean meat powder” event.China Network Television report. (2011) Available at: http://jingji.cntv.cn/20110315/106477_2.shtml. (Accessed: 15 March 2011).
China News net. 105 β-agonists events were reported in Tangshan, Hebei province. (2012) Available at: http://news.xinhuanet.com/2012-10/11/c_113335414.htm. (Accessed: 11 October 2012).
MOA Regulation 1031-3-2008 from Chinese Ministry of Agriculture: Determination of β-agonists residues in swine liver and urine Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry method (2008).
MOA Regulation 1063-3-2008 from Chinese Ministry of Agriculture: Determination of β-receptor agonists in animal urine Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (2008).
Ji, X., He, Z, Ai, X., Yang, H. & Xu C. Determination of clenbuterol by capillary electrophoresis immunoassay with chemiluminescence detection. Talanta 70, 353–357 (2006).
Wang, J. P. & Shen, J. Z. Detection of Salbutamol and Clenbuterol in swine liver and swine urine by Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assays. Chinese J. Animal and Veterinary Sciences 36, 397–401 (2005).
Wang, P. L., Wang, R. G., Zhang, W., Su, X. O. & Luo, H. F. Novel fabrication of immunochromatographic assay based on up conversion phosphors for sensitive detection of clenbuterol. Biosensors and Bioelectronics 77, 866–870 (2016).
Wang, P. L., Wang, Z. & Su XO A sensitive and quantitative fluorescent multi-component immune-chromatographic sensor for β-agonist residues. Biosensors and Bioelectronics 64, 511–516 (2014).
Xie, Y. et al. A novel immunochromatographic assay (ICA) based on surface-enhanced Raman scattering for the sensitive and quantitative determination of clenbuterol. Analytical Methods 7, 513–520 (2015).
Zhu, G. C., Hu, Y. J., Gao, J. & Zhong, L. Highly sensitive detection of clenbuterol using competitive surface-enhanced Raman scattering immunoassay. Analytica Chimica Acta 697, 61–66 (2011).
Martin, M. Surface-enhanced spectroscopy. Rev. Mod. Phys. 57, 783–826 (1985).
Aroca, R. Surface enhanced vibrational spectroscopy. John Wiley & Sons 11, 17–22 (2006).
Kneipp, K., Kneipp, H., Abdali, S., Berge, R. W. & Bohr, H. Single molecule Raman detection of enkephalin on silver colloidal particles. Spectroscopy 18, 433–440 (2004).
Nie, S. & Emory, S. R. Probing single molecules and single nanoparticles by surface-enhanced Raman scattering. Science 275, 1102–1106 (1997).
Izquierdo, I. I., Sanche, S. Z. & Garcia, J. V. R. Adsorption of beta-adrenergic agonists used in sport doping on metal nanoparticles: a detection study based on surface-enhanced Raman scattering. Langmuir 26, 14663–14670 (2010).
Fu, W. L., Zhen, S. J. & Huan, C. Z. One-pot green synthesis of graphene oxide/gold nanocomposites as SERS substrates for malachite green detection. Analyst 138, 3075–3081 (2013).
Huang, J. et al. Nanocomposites of size-controlled gold nanoparticles and grapheme oxide: Formation and applications in SERS and catalysis. Nanoscale 2, 2733–2738 (2010).
Wu, X., Xu, C., Tripp, R. A., Huang, Y. W. & Zhao, Y. Detection and differentiation of foodborne pathogenic bacteria in mung bean sprouts using field deployable label-free SERS devices. Analyst 138, 3005–3012 (2013).
European Union Commission Decision 2002/657/EC of 12 August 2002, Off J Communities L221, 8–36.
Zhai, F. L., Huang Y. Q., Wang X. C. & Lai K. Q. Surface enhanced raman spectroscopy for rapid determination of β-agonists in swine urine. Chinese Journal of Analytical Chemistry 40, 718–723 (2012).
Zhai, F. L., Huang Y. Q., Li, C. Y., Wang X. C. & Lai K. Q. Rapid determination of ractopamine in swine urine using surface- enhanced raman spectroscopy. J. Agricultural and Food chemistry 59, 10023–10027 (2011).
Vivó, T. G. & Schoenmakers, P. J. Automatic selection of optimal Savitzky-Golay smoothing. Anal. Chem. 78, 4598–4608 (2006).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by a special fund for Chinese Agro-scientific Research in the Public Interest (No. 201203088-1) and the innovation project for the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
J.C., X.-O.S and Y.Z. designed the study, J.C. and S.W. performed the study, J.C. and Y.Z. analysed the data and J.C., Y.Z. wrote the manuscript. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Electronic supplementary material
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Cheng, J., Su, XO., Wang, S. et al. Highly Sensitive Detection of Clenbuterol in Animal Urine Using Immunomagnetic Bead Treatment and Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy. Sci Rep 6, 32637 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep32637
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep32637
This article is cited by
-
A novel fluorescence internal filtration immunoassay for the detection of clenbuterol
European Food Research and Technology (2022)
-
Non-invasive SERS serum detection technology combined with multivariate statistical algorithm for simultaneous screening of cervical cancer and breast cancer
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry (2021)
-
Microwave method synthesis of magnetic ionic liquid/gold nanoparticles as ultrasensitive SERS substrates for trace clopidol detection
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry (2020)
-
A fluorometric clenbuterol immunoassay based on the use of organic/inorganic hybrid nanoflowers modified with gold nanoclusters and artificial antigen
Microchimica Acta (2018)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.