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Microbiol Biotechnol Rep | Volume 1, Issue 2

Page 8

Notes:

November 16-17, 2017 Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Annual Congress on

Mycology and Fungal Infections

Ramaraja Ramasamy

The University of Georgia, USA

Electrochemical biosensors for rapid diagnosis of fungal infections in agriculture

E

conomic losses to agriculture due to pest and pathogen infections are estimated at $40 billion annually and

the economic losses to the health care industry due to food borne illnesses are estimated at $15 billion in the

US alone. Early detection of pest or pathogen infection in agricultural crops and reliable detection of harmful

pathogens in food are important to minimize agricultural productivity loss, ensure food safety, improve food

quality and minimize food related public health issues. There is a pressing need to develop rapid, highly selective

and sensitive detection technologies for early identification of plant and human pathogens. While a variety of

molecular methods are currently being used for this purpose, an inexpensive, high selective, rapid method for the

detection of pathogens is highly desired. Electrochemistry biosensors offer unique advantages to this application.

Electrochemical sensors have been widely explored for medical and environmental sensing applications, but not as

much for food and agricultural applications. An electrochemical biosensor uses a highly selective bio-recognition

element such as enzymes, antibody, aptamer or virus and is capable of detecting biding events with ultra-low detection

limits. This presentationwill focus on some of the recent developments in our lab in the development of electrochemical

biosensors for detection of crop diseases and fungal plant pathogens.

Biography

Ramaraja Ramasamy is currently working as Adjunct Professor in The University of Georgia, USA. His primary focus is on electrochemical energy conversion, but

focus areas also include biosensors and bio-nanomaterials. His research is highly interdisciplinary and overlaps with Material Science, Biochemistry, Microbiology,

Biotechnology and Analytical Chemistry.

rama@uga.edu