Simple optical nanomotion method for single-bacterium viability and antibiotic response testing.
Maria Ines VillalbaEugenia RossettiAllan BonvallatCharlotte YvanoffVjera RadonicicRonnie G WillaertSandor KasasPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Antibiotic resistance is nowadays a major public health issue. Rapid antimicrobial susceptibility tests (AST) are one of the options to fight this deadly threat. Performing AST with single-cell sensitivity that is rapid, cheap, and widely accessible, is challenging. Recent studies demonstrated that monitoring bacterial nanomotion by using atomic force microscopy (AFM) upon exposure to antibiotics constitutes a rapid and highly efficient AST. Here, we present a nanomotion detection method based on optical microscopy for testing bacterial viability. This novel technique only requires a very basic microfluidic analysis chamber, and an optical microscope equipped with a camera or a mobile phone. No attachment of the microorganisms is needed, nor are specific bacterial stains or markers. This single-cell technique was successfully tested to obtain AST for motile, nonmotile, gram-positive, and gram-negative bacteria. The simplicity and efficiency of the method make it a game-changer in the field of rapid AST.
Keyphrases
- high speed
- atomic force microscopy
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- single cell
- highly efficient
- public health
- high resolution
- high throughput
- rna seq
- single molecule
- label free
- circulating tumor cells
- sensitive detection
- mass spectrometry
- gram negative
- quantum dots
- optical coherence tomography
- real time pcr
- multidrug resistant