Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Novel approaches toward preferential detection of viable cells using
nucleic acid amplification techniques"
09-002
This article elaborates on possible future directions for microbial viability
assessment using nucleic acid-modifying compounds in combination with DNA- (and
potentially RNA-) amplification technologies. Bacteria were traditionally
considered viable when they could be cultured, whereas today's viability concept
is based on the presence of some form of metabolic activity, responsiveness, RNA
transcripts that tend to degrade rapidly after cell death, or of an intact
membrane. The latter criterion was the focus of recent approaches to limit
detection to intact cells using ethidium monoazide or propidium monoazide.
Membrane integrity must, however, be considered as a very conservative criterion
for microbial viability. The new concept presented here aims at limiting nucleic
acid-based detection to cells with an active metabolism, which might be a more
appropriate viability criterion. To selectively detect only cells with metabolic
and respiratory activity (while excluding inactive dead cells from detection),
we suggest the use of 'activity-labile compounds'. In addition to their
potential usefulness for viability assessment, these new compounds could also be
beneficial for selectively amplifying nucleic acids of cells that have metabolic
activities of interest. This preferential detection of microorganisms with
certain metabolic capabilities is referred to as 'molecular enrichment' in
distinction to 'growth enrichment'.
Nocker A, Camper AK, "Novel approaches toward preferential detection of viable cells using nucleic
acid amplification techniques,"
FEMS Microbiology Letters 2009; 291:137-142
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