High-Throughput Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing of Escherichia coli by Wide-Field Mid-Infrared Photothermal Imaging of Protein Synthesis.
Zhongyue GuoYeran BaiMeng ZhangLu LanJi-Xin ChengPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
Antimicrobial resistance poses great threats to global health and economics. Current gold-standard antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) requires extensive culture time (36-72 h) to determine susceptibility. There is an urgent need for rapid AST methods to slow down antimicrobial resistance. Here, we present a rapid AST method based on wide-field mid-infrared photothermal imaging of protein synthesis from 13 C-glucose in Escherichia coli . Our wide-field approach achieved metabolic imaging for hundreds of bacteria at the single-cell resolution within seconds. The perturbed microbial protein synthesis can be probed within 1 h after antibiotic treatment in E. coli cells. The susceptibility of antibiotics with various mechanisms of action has been probed through monitoring protein synthesis, which promises great potential of the proposed platform toward clinical translation.
Keyphrases
- antimicrobial resistance
- escherichia coli
- high throughput
- high resolution
- single cell
- global health
- photodynamic therapy
- induced apoptosis
- public health
- microbial community
- metabolic syndrome
- blood pressure
- oxidative stress
- biofilm formation
- cystic fibrosis
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- cell proliferation
- single molecule
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- fluorescence imaging
- cell death
- silver nanoparticles
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- combination therapy
- quantum dots