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Image Search Results
Journal: Cell reports
Article Title: Dysregulation of Streptococcus pneumoniae zinc homeostasis breaks ampicillin resistance in a pneumonia infection model
doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.110202
Figure Lengend Snippet: (A) Phenotypic impact of Zn, PBT2, and PBT2 + Zn on S. pneumoniae 23F growth in cation-adjusted Mueller-Hinton broth (CA-MHB) supplemented as indicated. The data correspond with the mean (± standard error of the mean) absorbance 600 nm measurements from three independent biological experiments. Error bars, where not visible, are overlapped by the representative symbols. (B) RNA sequencing of S. pneumoniae 23F to determine relative gene expression, expressed as log 2 -fold change. Each dot represents a gene, distributed on the x axis in accordance with locus tag numbering for 23F. Genes more highly expressed in the presence of 8 μM PBT2 + 32 μM ZnSO 4 are present above the x axis (pink), with those below the x axis expressed at a lower level (purple). Genes of interest are annotated with their putative or characterized functions. (C and D) Whole cell metal ion accumulation of Mn (C) and Zn (D) in S. pneumoniae 23F in the presence of PBT2, Zn, and PBT2 + Zn grown in CA-MHB. Error bars indicate standard deviation of the mean from three biological replicates, ns = p > 0.05, ** = p < 0.01, **** = p < 0.0001, one-way analysis of variance with the Tukey post-test. (E) Development of resistance assays for S. pneumoniae 23F during serial passage in the presence of sub-inhibitory concentrations of PBT2 + ampicillin or vancomycin, as a positive control, in CA-MHB. Experiment was terminated at 15 days owing to a loss of viability in the presence of PBT2 + ampicillin. Data represent three biological replicates. (F) Enumeration of colony-forming units (CFUs) of S. pneumoniae from the lungs of BALB/c mice, following intranasal challenge with 5 × 10 5 CFU of strain DAW30 (n = 10). Colonization was examined at 24 h after the challenge. BALB/c mice were treated with combinations of ampicillin, PBT2, ampicillin + PBT2 or vehicle at 0 h and 6 h after infection via oral gavage (PBT2, vehicle) and/or subcutaneous ampicillin. Data represent the mean (± standard deviation) of two independent experiments with statistical analyses performed by the Mann-Whitney U test. ns = p > 0.05, *** = p = 0.001.
Article Snippet:
Techniques: RNA Sequencing, Gene Expression, Standard Deviation, Positive Control, Infection, MANN-WHITNEY
Journal: Cell reports
Article Title: Dysregulation of Streptococcus pneumoniae zinc homeostasis breaks ampicillin resistance in a pneumonia infection model
doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.110202
Figure Lengend Snippet: Combination of PBT2 and Zn resensitizes pathogenic S. pneumoniae strains to antibiotics of various classes
Article Snippet:
Techniques:
Journal: Cell reports
Article Title: Dysregulation of Streptococcus pneumoniae zinc homeostasis breaks ampicillin resistance in a pneumonia infection model
doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.110202
Figure Lengend Snippet: KEY RESOURCES TABLE
Article Snippet:
Techniques: Virus, Recombinant, SYBR Green Assay, RNA Sequencing, Expressing, Construct, Plasmid Preparation, Software, Microscopy, Targeted Proteomics
Journal: Molecules
Article Title: Do Ganoderma Species Represent Novel Sources of Phenolic Based Antimicrobial Agents?
doi: 10.3390/molecules28073264
Figure Lengend Snippet: Antibacterial activity of H 2 O Ganoderma extracts using three different antibacterial assays.
Article Snippet: G. applanatum showed the highest
Techniques: Activity Assay, Diffusion-based Assay
Journal: Molecules
Article Title: Do Ganoderma Species Represent Novel Sources of Phenolic Based Antimicrobial Agents?
doi: 10.3390/molecules28073264
Figure Lengend Snippet: Antibacterial activity of CHCl 3 extracts of G. applanatum and G. resinaceum using microdilution assay.
Article Snippet: G. applanatum showed the highest
Techniques: Activity Assay
Journal: Molecules
Article Title: Do Ganoderma Species Represent Novel Sources of Phenolic Based Antimicrobial Agents?
doi: 10.3390/molecules28073264
Figure Lengend Snippet: PCA of quantified phenolic compounds and AB activity of CHCl 3 and H 2 O extracts of G. applanatum and G. resinaceum . Abbreviations: GA— G. applanatum ; GR— G. resinaceum : MBC—minimal bactericidal concentration (mg/mL); MIC—minimal inhibitory concentration (mg/mL); BC— B. cereus ; EC— E. coli ; KP— K. pneumoniae ; PA— P. aeruginosa ; SA— S. aureus .
Article Snippet: G. applanatum showed the highest
Techniques: Activity Assay, Concentration Assay
Journal: Advanced Science
Article Title: Droplet‐Based Single‐Cell Measurements of 16S rRNA Enable Integrated Bacteria Identification and Pheno‐Molecular Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing from Clinical Samples in 30 min
doi: 10.1002/advs.202003419
Figure Lengend Snippet: PNA probe hybridization assay for specific detection of uropathogens. A) We have designed PNA probes specific to the i) E. coli and ii) P. mirabilis species, the iii) Enterobacterales order, and the iv) eubacterial kingdom, in order to be able to detect all predominant uropathogens. We ensure that the designed probes can detect signal from target bacteria over blank urine background (N) by measuring probe fluorescence in the presence of E. coli (EC), P. mirabilis (PM), K. pneumoniae (KP), and P. aeruginosa (PA) ( p ‐values are calculated using unpaired one‐tailed t ‐tests; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001, no asterisks between bars indicates no significant difference). B) Our assay works across a wide range of i) lysis temperatures and ii) hybridization temperatures (green: selected temperatures). C) Bulk‐based pheno‐molecular AST of reference E. coli ATCC 25922 and multi‐drug resistant E. coli BAA 2471 using hybridization detection of 16S rRNA is feasible, but requires >90 min of culture/antibiotic exposure to differentiate the effect of gentamicin on the susceptible and the resistant strains of E. coli . Data presented as mean +/− SD, n ≥ 3 or n ≥ 2 (bulk pheno‐molecular AST).
Article Snippet: To demonstrate, we incubated EC PNA probes with either
Techniques: Hybridization, Bacteria, Fluorescence, One-tailed Test, Lysis
Journal: Advanced Science
Article Title: Droplet‐Based Single‐Cell Measurements of 16S rRNA Enable Integrated Bacteria Identification and Pheno‐Molecular Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing from Clinical Samples in 30 min
doi: 10.1002/advs.202003419
Figure Lengend Snippet: Single‐cell detection of bacterial 16S rRNA from urine using microfluidic droplets. A) i) Urine samples of distinctly different color and turbidity can be discretized using flow‐focusing to generate monodisperse droplets (scale bars ≈50 µm) of ii) 4 ± 1 pL volume. B) Droplet fluorescence peak traces i) without E. coli , droplets emit baseline fluorescence signal, and have a positive droplet rate of 0.0079% (also known as the average limit of blank). ii) In the presence of 10 7 CFU mL −1 E. coli , droplets emit a higher fluorescence signal, and have a positive droplet rate of 6.67%. C) Droplet‐based quantification of E. coli in urine across four orders of magnitude within the clinically relevant dynamic range for UTIs (10 4 to 2 × 10 7 CFU mL −1 ), R 2 = 0.992 D) i) Reduction in droplet volume from 30 to 4 to 1 pL results in lower background fluorescence signals (scale bars in white ≈100 µm). ii) Compared to larger 30 pL droplets, 4 pL droplets facilitate faster generation of differentiable fluorescence signal over the reduced local background, as quickly as within 15 min. Data in (C,D(i)) presented as mean +/− SD, n ≥ 2 except for 2 × 10 7 CFU mL −1 input bacterial concentration in (C).
Article Snippet: To demonstrate, we incubated EC PNA probes with either
Techniques: Fluorescence, Concentration Assay
Journal: Advanced Science
Article Title: Droplet‐Based Single‐Cell Measurements of 16S rRNA Enable Integrated Bacteria Identification and Pheno‐Molecular Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing from Clinical Samples in 30 min
doi: 10.1002/advs.202003419
Figure Lengend Snippet: Accelerating antimicrobial susceptibility assessment via quantitative measurement of 16S rRNA from single cells. A) LIF detection of droplets containing E. coli cells suspended in MH broth i) without 30 min culture results in the expected 8% positive droplet frequency (7.02% observed), ii) following 30 min culture results in higher positive droplet intensities (indicative of higher 16S rRNA production) and 7.70% frequency, and iii) and after 30 min culture along with bactericidal gentamicin results in lower positive droplet intensities (indicative of relatively lower 16S rRNA production) and 3.12% frequency. B) Resistant E. coli can be differentiated from reference E. coli spiked into urine by comparing the positive droplet percentage from cells subject to antibiotic and no‐antibiotic conditions (“Normalized Positive Droplet Population”) for culture/drug exposure durations as low as 10 min. C) Resistant and susceptible strains of E. coli can be differentiated using our platform for three different antibiotics spanning distinct classes—gentamicin (aminoglycoside), ciprofloxacin (fluoroquinolone), and ampicillin (beta lactam). Error bars represent 1 standard deviation. The p ‐values are calculated from unpaired one‐tailed t ‐tests.
Article Snippet: To demonstrate, we incubated EC PNA probes with either
Techniques: Standard Deviation, One-tailed Test
Journal: Advanced Science
Article Title: Droplet‐Based Single‐Cell Measurements of 16S rRNA Enable Integrated Bacteria Identification and Pheno‐Molecular Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing from Clinical Samples in 30 min
doi: 10.1002/advs.202003419
Figure Lengend Snippet: DropDx clinical comparison study of 50 deidentified patient samples from Johns Hopkins Hospital. A) Each sample was simultaneously tested using clinical standard ID/AST tests as well as with 2 DropDx devices for measurements without and with ciprofloxacin. For ID, we used a combination of EC, EB, and UNI probes. B) Our 7‐outcome DropDx workflow is used to determine if there is a Gram‐negative bacterial infection present, whether the infecting pathogen is E. coli , whether the infecting pathogen is in the Enterobacterales order, or whether the infecting pathogen is a different (Gram‐negative) bacteria and to assess the susceptibility of the infecting pathogen to ciprofloxacin. λ is the proportion of droplets that contain a single cell to all droplets. C) Unbiased thresholding for each diagnostic metric was conducted in pilot studies using ROC curve analysis, and the final data groups and resulting ROC curves are plotted for i) differentiating culture‐positive from culture‐negative samples (AUC: 0.964), for ii) differentiating E. coli from non‐ E. coli samples (AUC: 1.000), for iii) differentiating Enterobacterales from non‐ Enterobacterales samples (AUC: 0.956), and for D) differentiating ciprofloxacin resistant from susceptible samples (AUC: 0.951). Importantly, DropDx's single‐cell pheno‐molecular AST results in a categorical agreement of 95.3% with no major errors. Error bars represent mean and standard error. The p ‐values are calculated from unpaired one‐tailed t‐tests.
Article Snippet: To demonstrate, we incubated EC PNA probes with either
Techniques: Comparison, Infection, Bacteria, Diagnostic Assay, One-tailed Test