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Development of a PCR-free electrochemical point of care test for clinical detection of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)

Corrigan, D. K., Schulze, H., Henihan, G., Hardie, A., Ciani, I., Giraud, G., Terry, J. G., Walton, A. J., Pethig, R., Ghazal, Peter, Crain, J., Campbell, C. J., Templeton, K. E., Mount, A. R. and Bachmann, T. T. 2013. Development of a PCR-free electrochemical point of care test for clinical detection of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Analyst 138 (22) , pp. 6997-7005. 10.1039/c3an01319g

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Abstract

An MRSA assay requiring neither labeling nor amplification of target DNA has been developed. Sequence specific binding of fragments of bacterial genomic DNA is detected at femtomolar concentrations using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). This has been achieved using systematic optimisation of probe chemistry (PNA self-assembled monolayer film on gold electrode), electrode film structure (the size and nature of the chemical spacer) and DNA fragmentation, as these are found to play an important role in assay performance. These sensitivity improvements allow the elimination of the PCR step and DNA labeling and facilitate the development of a simple and rapid point of care test for MRSA. Assay performance is then evaluated and specific direct detection of the MRSA diagnostic mecA gene from genomic DNA, extracted directly from bacteria without further treatment is demonstrated for bacteria spiked into saline (106 cells per mL) on gold macrodisc electrodes and into human wound fluid (104 cells per mL) on screen printed gold electrodes. The latter detection level is particularly relevant to clinical requirements and point of care testing where the general threshold for considering a wound to be infected is 105 cells per mL. By eliminating the PCR step typically employed in nucleic acid assays, using screen printed electrodes and achieving sequence specific discrimination under ambient conditions, the test is extremely simple to design and engineer. In combination with a time to result of a few minutes this means the assay is well placed for use in point of care testing.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Medicine
Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry
ISSN: 0003-2654
Date of Acceptance: 26 September 2013
Last Modified: 10 Jul 2018 12:30
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/112258

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