Abstract

The objective of this work was to validate the antibody-conjugated fluorescent dye-doped silica nanoparticle- (FDS-NP-) based assay for the rapid detection of Campylobacter jejuni in chicken samples using ISO16140:2003 single-laboratory validation guidelines. This assay reversed the paradigm of microbial testing. The noncultured FDS-NPs increased the fluorescent light signal of the test, not the cell numbers, and significantly reduced the detection time. Validation results showed that relative detection level (LOD) of the assay was 103 cfu/ml. The antibody-conjugated FDS-NPs were evaluated for the detection of C. jejuni in 140 chicken samples collected from slaughterhouses (50 carcass rinse water, 60 rectal swabs, and 30 viscera contents) against ISO 10272 reference method with duplex PCR confirmation. The relative accuracy (AC), relative specificity (SP), and relative sensitivity (SE) were 95.67%, 100%, and 94.87%, respectively. The inclusivity test of C. jejuni strains was 100% positive. The exclusivity test demonstrated no cross-reactivity with 32 strains of non-Campylobacter strains. The FDS-NP assay was very fast and specific, with time to result of 30 min compared with the 2–5 days required by the reference method. The noncultured FDS-NPs demonstrated comparable performance to the cultured reference method to detect C. jejuni in poultry samples. It is applicable for effective screening of poultry product category.

1. Introduction

Campylobacter spp. from chicken has been considered the major cause of gastrointestinal campylobacteriosis [1]. Outbreaks of C. jejuni were reported worldwide with chicken meats identified as implicated foods [2, 3]. In the United States, the number of patients with C. jejuni infection was as high as 1000 per 100,000 population. However, more than 80% of chickens are marketed without detectable Campylobacter [4]. In poultry processing plants, about 65% of Campylobacter positive flocks were reported in the central and northeastern regions of Thailand [5], and 26.6% were reportedly found in the central markets. During slaughter and processing, there is a chance of bacterial contamination to the finished products.

The detection and identification of the microorganisms are of great importance for poultry production to allow implementing proper and timely interventions that can ensure safety of the products. Traditional microbiological methods of detecting and enumerating bacteria usually require several days to yield reliable results. In many cases, the products have already been used by the consumers before the analyses are completed. Therefore, alternative rapid assays based on different microbiological methods are constantly developed [6]. The effective testing of bacteria requires methods of analysis that meet a number of challenging criteria. Time and sensitivity of analysis are the most important limitations related to the usefulness of microbiological testing. Bacterial detection methods have to be rapid and very sensitive since the presence of even a single pathogenic organism in foods may be an infectious dose [7]. Most rapid methods utilize principles of microbiological-, chemical-, biochemical-, immunological-, and molecular-based techniques, which may require cells, metabolites, or genetic materials of the target bacteria for detection. The methods that are nonculture-based method could further reduce time required for growth and production of microbial metabolites for detection.

The current development of nanotechnology has affected a variety of sciences including microbiology. The research findings have changed traditional methods into nanoscale that can be combined with different techniques to develop detection methods. Combining sol-gel and microemulsion techniques, Santra et al. [8] synthesized FDS-NPs, which encapsulated thousands of fluorescent dye molecules inside the nanoparticles. The silica nanoparticles gave high intensity of the fluorescent signal and high photostability due to dye molecules doped within silica matrix. They showed high solubility, low toxicity, and easy conjugation with various applications with several biomolecules, with or without surface modifications. The experiments on synthesis, characterization, and application of the FDS-NPs were reported. Hun and Zhang [9] used FDS-NPs for the determination of calcium in the blood serum. Zhao et al. [10] used FDS-NPs combined with flow cytometry for single bacterial cell quantification. A method suggesting the use of nanoparticles for the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis was also reported [11]. Extensive reviews on the applications of nanoparticles in rapid detections were carried out by Koedrith et al. [12, 13].

Our research group had developed silica and ferromagnetic nanoparticle-based detection for Vibrio cholerae in seafoods, Salmonella spp., E. coli O157:H7, and C. jejuni in poultry and products [1418]. These methods showed potential applications in the routine use. Schematic illustration of the silica nanoparticle-based test method is shown in Figure 1. However, they require proper validation to demonstrate the performance compared with that of the reference methods. The antibody-conjugated dye-doped silica nanoparticle-based detection has potential to provide a rapid and accurate screening test results for slaughterhouses to manage the pathogen-free and infected flocks into the processing line. The practice will enable processors to avoid cross-contamination to processing equipment and eventually poultry meats.

Alternative microbiological test methods require proper validation as guided by ISO 16140:2003 [19], the general principles and the technical protocol for the validation of alternative methods in the field of microbiological analysis of food, animal feeding stuffs, and environmental and veterinary samples, or by AOAC validation methods, to ensure that accuracy, specificity, sensitivity, ruggedness, and consistency of the method are met before use in the industry.

Therefore, the objective of this work was to validate test kit based on fluorescent dye-doped antibody-conjugated silica nanoparticles (FDS-NPs) for the rapid detection of Campylobacter jejuni in chicken samples following the single-laboratory method validation procedure of ISO 16140:2003 standard.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Cultures and Preparation of Bacteria

C. jejuni (ATCC 33560), ranging from 101 to 107 cfu/ml, was used to determine the limit of detection (LOD). Reference strains of C. jejuni (ATCC 33291, ATCC 33560, and ATCC 81176) and 47 in-house isolates of Campylobacter spp. from chicken samples were used for inclusivity testing. All Campylobacter strains were grown under microaerobic conditions (5% O2, 10% CO2, and 85% N2) on the modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar (mCCDA, Oxoid, UK) at 42°C for 48 h. Other nontarget bacteria (103 cfu/ml), Bacillus megaterium, Citrobacter freundii, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Proteus vulgaris, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella Typhimurium (DMST 562), Shigella flexneri, and Vibrio cholerae, and E. coli () and Salmonella spp. () in-house isolates from slaughterhouse samples were grown in Tryptone Soya Broth (TSB, Oxoid, UK) at 37°C overnight and used as exclusive strains. All test bacteria were collected and diluted with phosphate buffer saline (1x PBS, pH 7.4). The initial bacteria concentrations were determined using McFarland number 0.5 (Thermo Scientific, USA) and verified by mCCDA plating methods.

2.2. Collection and Preparation of Chicken Samples

All chicken samples: carcass rinse water (), rectal swabs (), and viscera contents (), were collected from slaughterhouses in Thailand. The collected samples were transported on ice to the laboratory within 2 h and processed immediately after arrival. In general, 1.0 ml of carcass rinse water and rectal swabs and approximately 1.0 g in weight of viscera contents were prepared and 10-fold serially diluted with 0.85% of sodium chloride (NaCl). Then, 0.1 ml aliquots of the prepared samples with appropriate dilutions were taken and separately analyzed, according to the protocols as described below to determine the presence of C. jejuni in the samples.

2.3. Direct Culture with Duplex PCR Assay for Identification of C. jejuni

The standard method for culturing C. jejuni was ISO 10272:2006 [20]. The confirmation was modified to use duplex PCR for 16S RNA and hipO genes specific to C. jejuni to replace biochemical tests of hippuricase activity. Briefly, aliquots of 0.1 ml samples were directly applied onto modified charcoal-cefoperazone-deoxycholate agar (mCCDA) plates, supplemented with cefoperazone (32 mg/l) and amphotericin B (10 mg/l), followed by incubation at 42°C for 48 h under microaerobic conditions. Colonies with characteristics of greyish, moist, and metallic sheen were identified as thermophilic Campylobacter species. The suspected colonies were counted, and five colonies were selected for duplex PCR analysis for confirmation. To prepare the DNA template, the selected colonies were suspended in sterile water and boiled for 10 min. The supernatants (5 μl per assay) were collected and used as PCR templates.

For PCR amplification, the 16S RNA and hipO primers were specifically designed for thermophilic Campylobacter and C. jejuni, respectively. The corresponding nucleotide sequences are shown in Table 1. The PCR mixtures contained 5 μl of PCR master mix (Molecular Biology Tools, Taiwan), 1.5 μl of each PCR primer (10 μM), and sterile water to a final volume of 25 μl. Amplification reaction was conducted in T100™ Thermal Cycler (Bio-Rad, USA) with the following conditions: 95°C for 5 min for initial denaturation, followed by 30 cycles of 95°C for 30 sec, 59°C for 30 sec, and 72°C for 30 sec, and final extension at 72°C for 5 min. The PCR products were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis. The sample containing specific DNA bands of approximately 816 and 323-bp in length corresponding to 16S RNA and hipO genes, respectively, was determined as a C. jejuni, whereas the presence of only 16S RNA fragments was identified as Campylobacter species. No amplification products were considered as negative results.

2.4. Synthesis of FDS-NPs and Surface Modifications

Synthesis of FDS-NPs and surface modifications were carried out as previously described [14, 15, 17, 18]. Briefly, mixtures of cyclohexane (75 ml), Triton X-100 (17.7 ml), and n-hexanol (18 ml) as oil, surfactant, and cosurfactant phases, respectively, were mixed with 4.8 ml aliquots of Rubpy dye solution (20 mM in deionized water). Then, 1 ml of tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) as silica precursors and 0.6 ml of ammonium hydroxide as initiators for polymerization reaction, respectively, were added in and mixed by stirring for 24 h. Afterwards, the FDS-NPs were obtained by precipitation with acetone. After centrifugation, they were washed with ethanol and deionized water several times to remove the excess solvents and unabsorbed dye, dried at 100°C for 48 h, and kept in the dark until further used.

For surface modifications, the FDS-NPs (32 mg) were added in 1 mM of acetic acid containing 10% of trimethoxysilylpropyl diethylenetriamine (DETA) and stirred for 30 min to produce the amine functional group. Then, the carboxyl functional group was generated by adding 20 ml of N,N-dimethylformamide containing 10% of succinic anhydride and stirred for 6 h under nitrogen gas. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) from Hitachi High Tech (model 7700, Japan) and Fourier-transform (FT) Raman spectroscopy from Bruker (model Vertex70 + RamII, Singapore) were used to determine the shape and size of FDS-NPs and the functional groups on the nanoparticle’s surfaces, respectively. All chemicals and reagents used were from Sigma-Aldrich (USA).

2.5. Bioconjugation of Specific Antibody for C. jejuni

Following chemical modifications, the surfaces of FDS-NPs were further cross-linked with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethyl aminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC) and N-hydroxy succinimide (NHS) system, followed by glutaraldehyde cross-linking and bioconjugation with specific monoclonal antibody (0.1 mg/ml, ab33023; Abcam, UK) towards C. jejuni. The particles were blocked with bovine serum albumin (BSA, 1%) in Tris-HCl solution (40 mM, pH 8.0), washed with PBS (1x, pH 7.4), and then stored at 4°C until further use.

2.6. Visual Detection of C. jejuni Using Antibody-Conjugated FDS-NPs as Reporters

Aliquots of 0.1 ml bacterial culture were incubated with 20 μl of antibody-conjugated FDS-NPs at room temperature (25°C) for 30 min with gentle agitation. The bacteria cell/FDS-NP complexes (approximately 20 μl) were dropped onto a slide and covered with clover glass. The presence of C. jejuni in each sample was visually observed under a fluorescence microscope (Carl Zeiss, Primo Star iLED, USA) with excitation wavelength of 312 nm. The images were captured with a digital camera (Canon, EOS 700D, Thailand). PBS buffer (1x) was used as a negative control throughout the experiments. The presence of large fluorescent orange dots with movement of live bacterial cells was denoted as a positive result, whereas the samples containing only very small fluorescent orange dots with Brownian movement of the nanoparticles indicated a negative result.

2.7. Validation of the Assay Using ISO 16140:2003 as Guidelines

According to ISO 16140:2003 [19], there were 3 tests to perform: relative detection level (LOD), selectivity (inclusivity/exclusivity), and comparative study.

2.7.1. Relative Level of Detection

The LOD was tested with pure culture of C. jejuni ATCC 33560 at different concentrations with six independent replications.

2.7.2. Selectivity Test

The inclusivity tests were conducted with pure cultures of 50 strains including C. jejuni ATCC 33291, ATCC 33560, and ATCC 81176 and 47 Campylobacter isolates collected from poultry slaughterhouses and confirmed and enlisted in our laboratory. On the other hand, the exclusivity tests were against nontarget organisms using 32 strains of Bacillus megaterium, Citrobacter freundii, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumonia, Proteus vulgaris, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella Typhimurium (DMST 562), Shigella flexneri, and Vibrio cholerae, including in-house isolates of 10 E. coli, and 13 Salmonella strains.

2.7.3. Comparative Study

According to EN ISO 16140 standard, a minimum of 60 products from 3 product types under the poultry category must be analyzed with approximately 50% positive and 50% negative products. The reference method was modified ISO 10272-1:2017 “Microbiology of the Food Chain—Horizontal Method for Detection and Enumeration of Campylobacter spp.—Part 1: Detection Method” [20]. Samples were prepared and divided to test in parallel with FDS-NPs and the reference methods. Suspected colonies on mCCDA were confirmed by duplex PCR. Results from FDS-NPs were used for calculation of relative accuracy (AC), relative specificity (SP), and relative sensitivity (SE) in comparison with results of the reference method. The values were calculated for each poultry sample type and in pool results. Positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV), as well as Cohen’s kappa index of concordance (k), were calculated to determine the efficacy of the assay for detection of C. jejuni against the reference method. The formula for calculations is as follows: where is positive accordance, is positive deviations, is negative accordance, is negative deviations, and is number of analyzed samples, respectively [19].

3. Results

3.1. Principle of C. jejuni Detection Using Antibody-Conjugated FDS-NPs

The principle of this method was to use FDS-NPs to attach on target cell surface. The loose particles were washed out, and the remaining aliquot was observed under fluorescent microscope for rapid detection of target cells of Campylobacter. The attempts were to increase light signals to identify the target cells under a fluorescent microscope, not to increase cell numbers that required much longer detection time. Results could be obtained in 30 min.

3.2. Synthesis and Characterization of FDS-NPs

FDS-NPs were prepared using water-in-oil microemulsion-based techniques. The FDS-NPs had spherical shape and sizes of approximately 50 nm in diameter, as revealed by TEM image (Figure 2).

3.3. Surface Modification of FDS-NPs for Antibody Attachment

The surfaces of FDS-NPs were successfully modified with amine and carboxyl groups. The modification allowed the particles to attach to glutaraldehyde cross-link that could connect to monoclonal antibodies against Campylobacter jejuni. The presence of the functional groups on the nanoparticle surface was confirmed with FT-Raman analysis. Figure 3 demonstrated amine group N-H stretching at wave number 3216 cm−1 and carboxyl group (C=O) at 1639 cm−1.

3.4. Validation of Antibody-Conjugated FDS-NP Assay Using ISO 16140:2003 Guidelines

FDS-NPs were validated against standard mCCDA plating method (ISO 10272:2006) with multiplex PCR confirmation following ISO 16140:2003. Relative detection level, selectivity (inclusivity/exclusivity tests), and comparative studies for relative accuracy, specificity, and sensitivity were tested.

3.4.1. Relative Level of Detection (LOD)

Figure 4 demonstrated the relative level of detection (LOD) of FDS-NP test. Images of cells under fluorescent microscope indicated that the FDS-NPs could detect Campylobacter at 103 cfu/ml. No orange spot was observed at 102 cfu/ml level.

Please see Supplementary Materials (available here) for information on Section 3.4.1.

3.4.2. Selectivity Test: Inclusivity and Exclusivity

The alternative FDS-NPs method was tested against 50 strains of C. jejuni for inclusivity. Results showed that the FDS-NPs could detect 100% of all inclusive strains. FDS-NPs also gave 100% negative results for all 32 exclusive strains tested. No cross-reaction was observed among the tested strains.

Please see Supplementary Materials for information on Section 3.4.2.

3.4.3. Comparative Study: Relative Accuracy (AC), Relative Specificity (SP), Relative Sensitivity (SE), Positive Predictive Value (PPV), and Negative Predictive Value (NPV)

The tests provided results for calculation of relative AC, SP, SE, PPV, and NPV values. The Samples of 3 types from poultry category, 50 carcass rinse samples, 60 rectal swabs, and 30 viscera contents, were analyzed in parallel with reference and alternative methods. Sample types represented low, medium, and high naturally contaminated levels. The values were calculated by comparing with results from the reference method, mCCDA plating with duplex PCR confirmation (Figure 5). Calculated results were shown in Table 2.

Figure 5 demonstrated gel patterns of samples containing specific DNA bands of approximately 816 and 323 bp in length of corresponding 16S RNA and hipO genes. The lanes with two bands were determined as positive results of C. jejuni, whereas the presence of only 16S RNA fragments represented Campylobacter species. Lane C, control, was C. jejuni ATCC 33291, and lanes 1–9 were C. jejuni isolated from viscera contents. Amplified products that failed to show these two bands were considered as negative result (lane N).

FDS-NPs exhibited high efficiency for samples with medium to high contamination levels (Table 2). The values of AC, SP, and SE (%) of the FDS-NPs, for carcass rinse samples, were also high at 92.00, 100, and 86.67, respectively. The values for rectal swab samples were 98.33, 100, and 98.3. The values of viscera contents were also high at 96.67, 100, and 96.42.

This observation was supported by high values of PPV at 100% for all sample types tested. PPV values were calculated from . The alternative FDS-NPs could detect C. jejuni target in all poultry samples and give no positive deviation.

There were 4 negative deviations with carcass samples, 1 with rectal swab and 1 with viscera content samples. The deviation affected the SE values of the test. The NPV values that indicated false negative outcomes were calculated from . The values of NPV were 83.33% for carcass rinse samples but were 50% and 66.67% for rectal swab and viscera contents, respectively. The low values could be caused by low numbers of negative samples (NA) of rectal swabs and viscera contents. A few deviated results, in this case, but at low negative samples (), greatly affected the NPV values.

The comparison was made with all sample types, 140 samples, of the poultry category, and results were tabulated in Table 3. There were 111 PA or TP without any PD or FP. However, 6 NDs were observed. The number of NA or TN was 23.

Table 4 demonstrated pool results of 140 samples for calculations of AC, SP, SE, PPV, NPV, and values. It was found that the AC, SP, and SE values of the FDS-NP alternative method were high, with values of 95.67%, 100%, and 94.87%, respectively. PPV and NPV values were at 100% for positive and 79.31% for negative predictions. The PPV value of 100% indicated no false positive of this test. The NPV value of 79.31% indicated that false negative could be found in this test compared with results from the reference method. The combined results showed very high correlation of the alternative and reference methods with the Cohen kappa index () of 0.86.

4. Discussion

4.1. Fluorescent Dye-Doped Silica Nanoparticle Characteristics
4.1.1. Principles of FDS-NP Method

FDS-NP assay is a noncultured method. The principles for detection of C. jejuni used antibody-conjugated FDS-NPs as signal reporters and relied on the increase of fluorescent signal rather than the increase of target cells. Fluorescent dye-doped molecules inside the FDS-NP particles and the number of particles covering the target cells produced significant light intensity for observation under the fluorescent microscope. The specific binding to target C. jejuni cells was aided by specific monoclonal antibody immobilized on the surfaces of nanoparticles. The excitation wavelength of 312 nm enables the fluorescent dyes in the nanoparticles to emit wavelengths of 590–600 nm. C. jejuni in complex with antibody-conjugated FDS-NPs showed extremely bright orange with rounded surface and moved randomly that could be observed easily under fluorescent microscope. In this study, a positive sample can be discriminated from a negative sample through brightness of the fluorescent signals. The positive samples had much brighter fluorescent light compared with the small and dispersed orange dots of the negative samples. The complex could be discriminated clearly from the irregular-shaped aggregates (if any).

4.1.2. Characteristics of FDS-NPs

The size of FDS-NPs of approximately 30–60 nm was consistent with that previously reported [14, 15, 17, 18]. Thepwiwatjit et al. [14] reported the FDS-NPs with relatively narrow size of 29–43 nm. The size distribution usually depended on synthesis techniques, equipment, time, maximum speed, size of magnetic stirrer, and container. After synthesis, the individual particle could be separated from big aggregated particles using centrifugation at low speed.

The surfaces of FDS-NPs were modified with amine and carboxyl groups. DETA and succinic anhydride were used to modify amine and carboxyl groups on the particle surface. The EDC/NHS coupling was treated on the particle surface for enhancing stability of the carboxyl group. FT-Raman spectra showed peaks at wave numbers 3400 to 3280 cm−1 that represent −NH2 asymmetric and symmetric stretching vibration. The data supported the existence of amino group from being modified by DETA. The band of 1630–1600 cm−1 indicated the C=O symmetric stretch [24] due to the addition of the carboxyl group on the particle surface. This finding was corresponding well with that of Gunasekaran et al. [25], Tansub et al. [17], and Tuitemwong et al. [18] who suggested that wave numbers 3500–3220 cm−1 indicated amine group N-H stretching and 1850–1550 cm−1 for carboxyl group C=O on the FDS-NP surfaces.

4.2. Validation of FDS-NP Assay Using ISO 16140:2003 Guidelines

Method validation is designed to confirm that an analytical procedure for a specific test is reliable, reproducible, and suitable for its intended application. These analytical methods need to be validated prior to the implementation in routine. It is especially true for this novel nanotechnology platform, where paradigm is changed from increasing target cell numbers to increasing signal of the target cells that were captured by antibody-conjugated FDS-NPs. In this single-laboratory validation, there are three tests to follow: relative detection level, selectivity (inclusivity/exclusivity tests), and comparison study, to demonstrate relative accuracy (AC), relative specificity (SP), and relative sensitivity (SE) against the reference method.

4.2.1. Relative Detection Level (LOD)

The objective of relative detection level was to determine the level of contamination to obtain 50% of positive results. To determine the LOD of the proposed assay, the FDS-NPs and reference methods were used to test various concentrations of the target C. jejuni ATCC 33560 ranging from 101 to 107 cfu/ml (). It was found that the level of detection was 103 cfu/ml. Results showed that approximately 103 cfu/ml of C. jejuni without enrichment gave positive signal as images shown in Figure 4. This assay was based on immune detection using specific antibody to detect the C. jejuni, the same principle as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Hochel et al. [26] applied the indirect competitive ELISA to determine Campylobacter spp. in foods using chemiluminescent substrate to give signal; they reported relative LOD in the range 104–106 cfu/ml. Sails et al. [27] developed a PCR ELISA assay to detect C. jejuni and C. coli in water and reported the LOD with enrichment process at cells lower than 103 cfu/ml. The FDS-NPs showed the favorable LOD compared to both methods. The lower LOD level could be achieved by applying short-time enrichment (2–4 h) before the test.

4.2.2. Selectivity: Inclusivity and Exclusivity

The FDS-NPs with monoclonal antibody showed high selectivity to C. jejuni. The selectivity was 100% positive to all C. jejuni targets and 100% negative to non-C. jejuni organisms. No cross-reactivity was found in the tests of non-Campylobacter strain (exclusivity). The monoclonal antibody presented good specificity against C. jejuni with the presence of components such as fecal, feed, and lipid that might interfere to the FDS-NP attachment to target cells. The selectivity relied on specific binding of monoclonal antibodies with target C. jejuni owing to its 15 amino acids that were specific with the target organism [28].

4.2.3. Comparative Study

FDS-NPs showed high values of AC, SP, and SE to different levels of contaminations in carcass rinse, rectal swab, and viscera content samples. No false positive was observed. However, there were false negatives with rectal swab and viscera samples that could be resulting from the interference of sample matrix on attachment of the particles on cell surface. Target cells at concentrations less than 103 cfu/ml (LOD) were not detected by this method and produced not detected results (false negative).

The values of PPV and NPV demonstrated proportion of true positive and true negative results of the FDS-NP assay. High values of both numbers demonstrated high percentages of true positive and negative proportions. PPV value was calculated as the number of true positive over true positive combined with false positive results. The value of 100% indicated no false positive of this test.

Carcass rinse samples had high NPV values of 83.33% indicating low rate of false negative results. The NPV value of both rectal swabs and viscera contents was relatively low as 50% and 66.67%, respectively. However, both sample types (rectal swabs and viscera contents) had only one discrepancy each, and carcass washing samples had 4 discrepancies. This false negative observation may be due to the low number of target cells, 103cells/g. The results of mCCDA plate count with PCR assay gave positive for cells less than 103 cfu/g, but FDS-NPs displayed negative results. However, the low NPV values could be explained that it was because of too small numbers of negative samples ( and 2) in this test. One discrepancy from 1 NA produced NPV of 50%. A low number of negative samples could introduce bias in the calculations. It was difficult to find negative samples from naturally contaminated cloacal swabs and viscera content samples.

With the pooled data, , the performance indexes, AC, SP, and SE, were high at 95.67%, 100%, and 94.87%, respectively (Table 4). The values of PPV and NPV were 100% and 79.31%, respectively. The PPV values indicated good positive agreement, without positive deviation, of the two methods.

The Cohen kappa values were defined by Cohen [29] and Landis and Koch [30] as values of ≤0.20 indicated poor agreement, between 0.21 and 0.40 fair agreement, between 0.41 and 0.60 moderate agreement, between 0.61 and 0.80 good agreement, and ≥0.81 very good agreement. In this case, the Cohen kappa value of the two methods was 0.86 indicating very good agreement between the two methods.

Compared to other findings, the 48 h real-time PCR for Campylobacter spp. had AC, SP, and SE for fruit and vegetable products of 98.33%, 96.77%, and 100%, respectively. The values for dairy products were lower to about 93.3%, 88.24%, and 100% [31]. The use of PCR combined with ELISA for Campylobacter detection compared with culture method gave a Cohen kappa value of 0.83 [32]. The FDS-NPs were able to give results equivalent to the more complicated method but with much less detection time and equipment. Lund et al. [33] used real-time PCR to determine Campylobacter spp. in chicken feces. The results showed relative LOD of 100–150 cfu/ml but the sample preparation and instrument were more complicated and time-consuming. The FDS-NPs were proved to be effective and rapid with almost real-time results for the rapid screening of C. jejuni and could be used in routine works with farm, chicken on truck, or poultry sample category.

5. Conclusion

The noncultured FDS-NPs with monoclonal antibody were successfully constructed with good consistency. Functional groups, amide and carboxyl, were attached onto the particle surface. Glutaraldehyde cross-linker could capture the functional group and allow antibodies to attach to the other end. That allowed FDS-NPs to readily bind on C. jejuni cell surface. The captured cells were extremely bright orange with rounded surface and movable under microscope. They could be discriminated clearly from the irregular shape aggregates.

Single-laboratory method validation of FDS-NPs against standard mCCDA plating with duplex PCR confirmation, following ISO16140:2003 guidelines, indicated that the FDS-MPs had a limit of detection level (LOD) of 103 cfu/ml. The method offered good specificity as all strains of Campylobacter jejuni were detected (inclusivity), and no cross-reactions were observed among the non-C. jejuni and other microflora tested (exclusivity). This performance was determined by analyzing 140 naturally contaminated samples from 3 types of poultry product category. The pooled sample relative accuracy (AC), specificity (SP), and sensitivity (SE) were high at 95.67%, 100%, and 94.87%, respectively. A very good agreement between the FDS-NPs and reference method was observed with Cohen kappa value of 0.86. It was evident that noncultured FDS-NP method was very specific with much shorter time, 30 min, compared to 2–5 days of the cultured reference method. The performance of FDS-NP method was equivalent to that of the reference method.

Data Availability

The limit of detection section and inclusivity and exclusivity testing data used to support the findings of this study are included within the supplementary information file.

Disclosure

Yortyot Seetang-Nun’s present address is Center of Excellence on Agricultural Biotechnology (AG-BIO/PERDO-CHE), Bangkok 10900, Thailand.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by funding from The Royal Golden Jubilee Ph.D. Program (RGJ) under the Thailand Research Fund (TRF) (Grant no. PHD/0024/2555).

Supplementary Materials

Relative LOD: the FDS-NPs test kit (). Table 5: LOD of the antibody-conjugated FDS-NP assay. Supplementary Materials. Inclusive and exclusive testing. Table 6: testing of inclusive strain using antibody-conjugated FDS-NP assay (50 strains of C. jejuni). Table 7: testing of exclusive strain using antibody-conjugated FDS-NP assay (32 strains). (Supplementary Materials)