Detecting bacteria and determining their susceptibility to antibiotics by stochastic confinement in nanoliter droplets using plug-based microfluidics
Top Cited Papers
- 4 July 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) in Lab on a Chip
- Vol. 8 (8) , 1265-1272
- https://doi.org/10.1039/b804911d
Abstract
This article describes plug-based microfluidic technology that enables rapid detection and drug susceptibility screening of bacteria in samples, including complex biological matrices, without pre-incubation. Unlike conventional bacterial culture and detection methods, which rely on incubation of a sample to increase the concentration of bacteria to detectable levels, this method confines individual bacteria into droplets nanoliters in volume. When single cells are confined into plugs of small volume such that the loading is less than one bacterium per plug, the detection time is proportional to plug volume. Confinement increases cell density and allows released molecules to accumulate around the cell, eliminating the pre-incubation step and reducing the time required to detect the bacteria. We refer to this approach as ‘stochastic confinement’. Using the microfluidic hybrid method, this technology was used to determine the antibiogram – or chart of antibiotic sensitivity – of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) to many antibiotics in a single experiment and to measure the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the drug cefoxitin (CFX) against this strain. In addition, this technology was used to distinguish between sensitive and resistant strains of S. aureus in samples of human blood plasma. High-throughput microfluidic techniques combined with single-cell measurements also enable multiple tests to be performed simultaneously on a single sample containing bacteria. This technology may provide a method of rapid and effective patient-specific treatment of bacterial infections and could be extended to a variety of applications that require multiple functional tests of bacterial samples on reduced timescales.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microfluidic high-throughput encapsulation and hydrodynamic self-sorting of single cellsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- The micro-Petri dish, a million-well growth chip for the culture and high-throughput screening of microorganismsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Stochastic inhibitor release and binding from single-enzyme moleculesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Nanoliter Reactors Improve Multiple Displacement Amplification of Genomes from Single CellsPLoS Genetics, 2007
- Gravity-Driven Microfluidic Particle Sorting Device with Hydrodynamic Separation AmplificationAnalytical Chemistry, 2007
- Nanoliter microfluidic hybrid method for simultaneous screening and optimization validated with crystallization of membrane proteinsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Reducing the global burden of tuberculosis: the contribution of improved diagnosticsNature, 2006
- Reactions in Droplets in Microfluidic ChannelsAngewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 2006
- Production of arrays of chemically distinct nanolitre plugs via repeated splitting in microfluidic devicesLab on a Chip, 2006
- Controlling the Shape of Filamentous Cells ofEscherichia coliNano Letters, 2005