Literature DB >> 33899069

Facile syringe filter-enabled bacteria separation, enrichment, and buffer exchange for clinical isolation-free digital detection and characterization of bacterial pathogens in urine.

Pengfei Zhang1, Aniruddha M Kaushik2, Kathleen E Mach3, Kuangwen Hsieh2, Joseph C Liao3, Tza-Huei Wang4.   

Abstract

The development of accelerated methods for pathogen identification (ID) and antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) for infectious diseases is necessary to facilitate evidence-based antibiotic therapy and reduce clinical overreliance on broad-spectrum antibiotics. Towards this end, droplet-based microfluidics has unlocked remarkably rapid diagnostic assays with single-cell and single-molecule resolution. Yet, droplet platforms invariably rely on testing purified bacterial samples that have been clinically isolated after lengthy (>16 h) plating. While plating-based clinical isolation is important for enriching and separating out bacteria from background in clinical samples and also facilitating buffer exchange, it creates a diagnostic bottleneck that ultimately precludes droplet-based methods from achieving significantly accelerated times-to-result. To alleviate this bottleneck, we have developed facile syringe filter-enabled strategies for bacterial separation, enrichment, and buffer exchange from urine samples. By selecting appropriately sized filter membranes, we separated bacterial cells from background particulates in urine samples and achieved up to 91% bacterial recovery after such 1-step filtration. When interfaced with droplet-based detection of bacterial cells, 1-step filtration improved the limit of detection for bacterial ID and quantification by over an order of magnitude. We also developed a facile buffer exchange strategy to prepare bacteria in urine samples for droplet-based AST that achieved up to 10-fold bacterial enrichment during buffer exchange. Our filtration strategies, can be easily integrated into droplet workflows, enable clinical isolation-free sample-to-answer ID and AST, and significantly accelerate the turnaround of standard infectious disease diagnostic workflows.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33899069     DOI: 10.1039/d1an00039j

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Analyst        ISSN: 0003-2654            Impact factor:   4.616


  2 in total

1.  Direct microfluidic antibiotic resistance testing in urine with smartphone capture: significant variation in sample matrix interference between individual human urine samples.

Authors:  Sarah Helen Needs; Sultan İlayda Dönmez; Alexander Daniel Edwards
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2021-11-29       Impact factor: 3.361

2.  Vancomycin-conjugated polydopamine-coated magnetic nanoparticles for molecular diagnostics of Gram-positive bacteria in whole blood.

Authors:  Abdurhaman Teyib Abafogi; Tepeng Wu; Daekyu Lee; Jinyeop Lee; Gyoujin Cho; Luke P Lee; Sungsu Park
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2022-09-05       Impact factor: 9.429

  2 in total

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