| Literature DB >> 33970612 |
Mohamed A Abdou Mohamed1,2,3, Hannah N Kozlowski1,2,4, Jisung Kim1,2,4, Kyryl Zagorovsky1,2, Melinda Kantor5, Jordan J Feld6, Samira Mubareka7,8, Tony Mazzulli5,8, Warren C W Chan1,2,4,9,10,11.
Abstract
The rapid and accurate detection of antimicrobial resistance is critical to limiting the spread of infections and delivering effective treatments. Here, we developed a rapid, sensitive, and simple colorimetric nanodiagnostic platform to identify disease-causing pathogens and their associated antibiotic resistance genes within 2 h. The platform can detect bacteria from different biological samples (i.e., blood, wound swabs) with or without culturing. We validated the multicomponent nucleic acid enzyme-gold nanoparticle (MNAzyme-GNP) platform by screening patients with central line associated bloodstream infections and achieved a clinical sensitivity and specificity of 86% and 100%, respectively. We detected antibiotic resistance in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in patient swabs with 90% clinical sensitivity and 95% clinical specificity. Finally, we identified mecA resistance genes in uncultured nasal, groin, axilla, and wound swabs from patients with 90% clinical sensitivity and 95% clinical specificity. The simplicity and versatility for detecting bacteria and antibiotic resistance markers make our platform attractive for the broad screening of microbial pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: DNAzyme; MRSA; RPA; antibiotic resistance; central line infection; gold nanoparticles; sepsis
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33970612 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c09902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881