Current Production Capability of Drug-Resistant Pathogen Enables Its Rapid Label-Free Detection Applicable to Wastewater-Based Epidemiology
A rapid and label-free method for the detection of drug-resistant pathogens is in high demand for wastewater-based epidemiology. As recently shown, the extent of electrical current production ( ) is a useful indicator of a pathogen's metabolic activity. Therefore, if drug-resistant bacteria hav...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Microorganisms (Basel) 2022-02, Vol.10 (2), p.472 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A rapid and label-free method for the detection of drug-resistant pathogens is in high demand for wastewater-based epidemiology. As recently shown, the extent of electrical current production (
) is a useful indicator of a pathogen's metabolic activity. Therefore, if drug-resistant bacteria have extracellular electron transport (EET) capability, a simple electric sensor may be able to detect not only the growth as a conventional plating technique but also metabolic activity specific for drug-resistant bacteria in the presence of antibiotics. Here, one of the multidrug-resistant pathogens in wastewater,
, was shown to generate
, and the extent of
was unaffected by the microbial growth inhibitor, kanamycin, while the current was markedly decreased in environmental EET bacteria
. Kanamycin differentiated
in
and
within 3 h. Furthermore, the detection of
was successful in the presence of
in the electrochemical cell. These results clarify the advantage of detecting drug-resistant bacteria using whole-cell electrochemistry as a simple and rapid method to detect on-site drug-resistant pathogens in wastewater, compared with conventional colony counting, which takes a few days. |
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ISSN: | 2076-2607 2076-2607 |
DOI: | 10.3390/microorganisms10020472 |