New, rapid point-of-need diagnostic methods for Bacillus anthracis detection can enhance civil and military responses to accidental or deliberate dispersal of anthrax as a biological weapon. Current laboratory-based methods for clinical identification of B. anthracis require 12 to 120h, and are confirmed by plaque assay using the well-characterized γ typing phage, which requires an additional minimum of 24h for bacterial culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlague surveillance is routinely conducted to predict future epizootics in wildlife and exposure risk for humans. The most common surveillance method for sylvatic plague is detection of antibodies to Yersinia pestis F1 capsular antigen in sentinel animals, such as coyotes (Canis latrans). Current serologic tests for Y.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article describes a simple and inexpensive signal amplification method, termed polymeric enzyme detection (PED), which permits rapid and sensitive detection of conserved sequences in the tuf gene that identify Staphylococcus genus, conserved sequences in the femB gene that specifically detect Staphylococcus aureus species, and the methicillin resistance gene mecA directly from positive blood culture bottles. Microbe-specific capture probes were immobilized onto microtiter plates or silicon chips. Target sequences and biotin-labeled, target-specific probes were hybridized to complementary capture probes to create a biotin-labeled, surface-immobilized tripartite complex.
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