AI Article Synopsis

  • Antimicrobial resistance is a growing global issue largely caused by improper antibiotic use, and current detection methods like agar plating are time-consuming and complex.
  • A new method combines a cell sorter with an elastic-light-scattering technique to quickly and accurately detect and classify antibiotic-resistant bacteria with fewer steps.
  • This innovative approach allows for the precise placement of bacteria on antibiotic-gradient plates and uses unique scatter patterns from the colonies to identify resistant strains in a rapid and non-destructive manner.

Article Abstract

The proliferation and dissemination of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria is an increasingly global challenge and is attributed mainly to the excessive or improper use of antibiotics. Currently, the gold-standard phenotypic methodology for detecting resistant strains is agar plating, which is a time-consuming process that involves multiple subculturing steps. Genotypic analysis techniques are fast, but they require pure starting samples and cannot differentiate between viable and non-viable organisms. Thus, there is a need to develop a better method to identify and prevent the spread of antimicrobial resistance. This work presents a novel method for detecting and identifying antibiotic-resistant strains by combining a cell sorter for bacterial detection and an elastic-light-scattering method for bacterial classification. The cell sorter was equipped with safety mechanisms for handling pathogenic organisms and enabled precise placement of individual bacteria onto an agar plate. The patterning was performed on an antibiotic-gradient plate, where the growth of colonies in sections with high antibiotic concentrations confirmed the presence of a resistant strain. The antibiotic-gradient plate was also tested with an elastic-light-scattering device where each colony's unique colony scatter pattern was recorded and classified using machine learning for rapid identification of bacteria. Sorting and patterning bacteria on an antibiotic-gradient plate using a cell sorter reduced the number of subculturing steps and allowed direct qualitative binary detection of resistant strains. Elastic-light-scattering technology is a rapid, label-free, and non-destructive method that permits instantaneous classification of pathogenic strains based on the unique bacterial colony scatter pattern. KEY POINTS: • Individual bacteria cells are placed on gradient agar plates by a cell sorter • Laser-light scatter patterns are used to recognize antibiotic-resistant organisms • Scatter patterns formed by colonies correspond to AMR-associated phenotypes.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11222266PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00253-024-13232-0DOI Listing

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