| Literature DB >> 24396433 |
Jianhong Shen1, Yixiang Guan2, Jianping Zhang2, Jianwu Tang3, Xiaojian Lu1, Chunxiu Zhang4.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the value of microarray technology for the detection of intracranial bacterial infection. A small gene chip was prepared based on the four pathogens commonly known to cause intracranial infection and the corresponding six types of common resistance genes in The Affiliated Hospital of Nantong University and The Affiliated Haian People's Hospital of Nantong University. Cerebrospinal fluid samples were then collected from 30 patients with clinically diagnosed intracranial infection for the detection of the bacteria and resistance genes. The results were compared with the bacterial culture and sensitivity test results from the Department of Clinical Laboratories. The laboratory bacterial culture took 4-5 days, and revealed that 12 cases were positive and 18 cases were negative for bacteria. The microarray analysis took 1 day, and bacteria and resistance genes were detected in 15 cases. The 16S gene and drug resistance genes were detected in 8 cases; however, the bacterial strain was not identified. Seven cases appeared negative for bacteria and resistance genes. Microarray technology is rapid, sensitive and suitable for use in the detection of intracranial infections and other diseases for which conventional bacterial culture has a low positive rate.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial culture; cerebrospinal fluid; drug resistance gene; intracranial infection; microarray
Year: 2013 PMID: 24396433 PMCID: PMC3881033 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2013.1443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Sequences of multiplex polymerase chain reaction primers and microarray hybridization probes.
| Name of bacteria and resistance genes | Primer and probe sequence (5′-3′) | Product size, bp |
|---|---|---|
| Sense primer: TAAAGCGATTGATGGTGATACG | 238 | |
| Antisense primer: AGCCAAGCCTTGACGAACTA | ||
| Probe: AGCGAGCATACGGCAATACTCGTTGACTGCCTCTTCGCTGT | ||
| Sense primer: GCCTTGACCGCTGGGAAAC | 319 | |
| Antisense primer: GGCGTATCCCGCAGATAAAT | ||
| Probe: CAACGCACTGACCATACCTACTTTGTTATTCGGGCCAAGC | ||
| Sense primer: CATGCGGTTCAGCCACGGTT | 471 | |
| Antisense primer: GCGCCAGTATTCCGCACCAA | ||
| Probe: CGAATCAGTCTTGCTCATCGTCGCTATCTGGCTGACTGCTT | ||
| Pneumococcal | Sense primer: CATTGTCTTAGGCGGAG | 679 |
| Antisense primer: ATTGGTGTATTGACTGC | ||
| Probe: CGTTGCCGAGTTTCCATGTAGGTCTTTACCATAGTAGTTTTG | ||
| 16S | Sense primer: AGGAGGTGATCCAACCGCA | 370 |
| Antisense primer: AACTGGAGGAAGGTGGGGAT | ||
| Probe: AGCTCACCATGTACGAACTGGGTGAATACGTTCCCGGGCCTTGT | ||
| mecA | Sense primer: GGCTATCGTGTCACAATCGTTGACG | 170 |
| Antisense primer: GGGTGGATAGCAGTACCTGAGCCA | ||
| Probe: CGTATCGACTGCATCAATCCAGATGGCAAAGATATTCAACTAACT | ||
| OXA-23 | Sense primer: ATGGAAGGGCGAGAAAAGG | 127 |
| Antisense primer: TTGCATGAGATCAAGACCGATA | ||
| Probe: AGTGGATCTTGTACGTGGACCGCAAGTTCCTGATAGACTGGGACTGCC | ||
| SHV | Sense primer: GCCTTGACCGCTGGGAAAC | 319 |
| Antisense primer: GGCGTATCCCGCAGATAAAT | ||
| Probe: CGAATCAGTCTTGCTCATCGTGTCGCCCTGCTTGGCCCGGATAAC | ||
| CTX-M | Sense primer: CGGGAGGCAGACTGGGTGT | 381 |
| Antisense primer: TCGGCTCGGTACGGTCGA | ||
| Probe: CCTGACTGCAATAGATCCTGACGGCCATCACTTTACTGGTGCTGC | ||
| TEM | Sense primer: GTCGCCGCATACACTATTCTCA | 258 |
| Antisense primer: CGCTCGTCGTTTGGTATGG | ||
| Probe: GTCAGCGAGAACATGTGTACGCGGTTAGCTCCTTCGGTCCTCCG | ||
| PBP1a | Sense primer: AGTATTCACTACTCAAATGC | 557 |
| Antisense primer: GCTACAAATTGAGAGGTGTT | ||
| Probe: CACTGAACAGCTGACATACG GGCAGCGTAAGCAGCAGCCATCT |
Figure 1Arrangement picture of the bacteria and resistance gene-detecting microarray. N, negative control probe; P, positioning probe; B, blank control; SA, Staphylococcus aureus; KNP, Klebsiella pneumoniae; PC, Streptococcus pneumoniae; E. coli, Escherichia coli.
Figure 2Detection of bacterial strains and resistance genes using electrophoresis of the PCR products. Lane 1, Staphylococcus aureus; 2, Klebsiella pneumoniae; 3, Escherichia coli; 4, 16S; 5, Streptococcus pneumoniae; 6, multiplex PCR of bacteria; 7, Marker; 8, OXA-23; 9, mecA; 10, TEM; 11, CTX-M; 12, PBP1a; 13, SHV; 14, multiplex PCR of resistance genes. The marker strips from the bottom to the top were: 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 and 1,000 bp. PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
Figure 3Identification of the bacterial species using microarray. (A) Staphylococcus aureus; (B) Klebsiella pneumoniae; (C) Escherichia coli; (D) Streptococcus pneumoniae; (E) 16S; (F) experimental water.
Figure 4Examples of microarray detection. (A) Klebsiella pneumoniae, 16S, CTX-M, TEM and SHV; (B) Escherichia coli, 16S and TEM; (C) 16S and mecA; (D) negative.