4.7 Article

The biochemical origins of the surface-enhanced Raman spectra of bacteria: a metabolomics profiling by SERS

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 408, Issue 17, Pages 4631-4647

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-016-9540-x

Keywords

Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy; Bacteria; Nucleotide degradation; Purine metabolism; Metabolic profiling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AI090815-01, GM104603, S10 RR020946]

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The dominant molecular species contributing to the surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) spectra of bacteria excited at 785 nm are the metabolites of purine degradation: adenine, hypoxanthine, xanthine, guanine, uric acid, and adenosine monophosphate. These molecules result from the starvation response of the bacterial cells in pure water washes following enrichment from nutrient-rich environments. Vibrational shifts due to isotopic labeling, bacterial SERS spectral fitting, SERS and mass spectrometry analysis of bacterial supernatant, SERS spectra of defined bacterial mutants, and the enzymatic substrate dependence of SERS spectra are used to identify these molecular components. The absence or presence of different degradation/salvage enzymes in the known purine metabolism pathways of these organisms plays a central role in determining the bacterial specificity of these purine-base SERS signatures. These results provide the biochemical basis for the development of SERS as a rapid bacterial diagnostic and illustrate how SERS can be applied more generally for metabolic profiling as a probe of cellular activity.

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