Rapid and accurate identification of pathogens causing infections is one of the biggest challenges in medicine. Timely identification of causative agents and their antimicrobial resistance profile can significantly improve the management of infection, lower costs for healthcare, mitigate ever-growing antimicrobial resistance and in many cases, save lives. Raman spectroscopy was shown to be a useful—quick, non-invasive, and non-destructive —tool for identifying microbes from solid and liquid media. Modifications of Raman spectroscopy and/or pretreatment of samples allow single-cell analyses and identification of microbes from various samples. It was shown that those non-culture-based approaches could also detect antimicrobial resistance. Moreover, recent studies suggest that a combination of Raman spectroscopy with optical tweezers has the potential to identify microbes directly from human body fluids. This review aims to summarize recent advances in non-culture-based approaches of identification of microbes and their virulence factors, including antimicrobial resistance, using methods based on Raman spectroscopy in the context of possible use in the future point-of-care diagnostic process.
Bloodstream infections are among the most common causes of hospitalizations and are often life-threatening. To establish an effective therapy for a patient, the timely identification of the causative agent and characterization of its antimicrobial susceptibility and resistance profiles are essential.
Optofluidics, a research discipline combining optics with microfluidics, currently aspires to revolutionize the analysis of biological and chemical samples, e.g., for medicine, pharmacology, or molecular biology. In order to detect low concentrations of analytes in water, we have developed an optofluidic device containing a nanostructured substrate for surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). The geometry of the gold surface allows localized plasmon oscillations to give rise to the SERS effect, in which the Raman spectral lines are intensified by the interaction of the plasmonic field with the electrons in the molecular bonds. The SERS substrate was enclosed in a microfluidic system, which allowed transport and precise mixing of the analyzed fluids, while preventing contamination or abrasion of the highly sensitive substrate. To illustrate its practical use, we employed the device for quantitative detection of persistent environmental pollutant 1,2,3-trichloropropane in water in submillimolar concentrations. The developed sensor allows fast and simple quantification of halogenated compounds and it will contribute towards the environmental monitoring and enzymology experiments with engineered haloalkane dehalogenase enzymes.
Bacteriophages,
or “phages” for short, are viruses
that replicate in bacteria. The therapeutic and biotechnological potential
of phages and their lytic enzymes is of interest for their ability
to selectively destroy pathogenic bacteria, including antibiotic-resistant
strains. Introduction of phage preparations into medicine, biotechnology,
and food industry requires a thorough characterization of phage–host
interaction on a molecular level. We employed Raman tweezers to analyze
the phage–host interaction of Staphylococcus
aureus strain FS159 with a virulent phage JK2 (=812K1/420)
of the Myoviridae family and a temperate phage 80α of the Siphoviridae
family. We analyzed the timeline of phage-induced molecular changes
in infected host cells. We reliably detected the presence of replicating
phages in bacterial cells within 5 min after infection. Our results
lay the foundations for building a Raman-based diagnostic instrument
capable of real-time, in vivo, in situ, nondestructive characterization of the phage–host relationship
on the level of individual cells, which has the potential of importantly
contributing to the development of phage therapy and enzybiotics.
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