4.5 Article

Vancomycin-resistant gene identification from live bacteria on an integrated microfluidic system by using low temperature lysis and loop-mediated isothermal amplification

Journal

BIOMICROFLUIDICS
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4977439

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan and Towards a World-Class University Project [104N2751E1]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [104-2119-M-007-009, 104-2811-E-007-031, 104-2221-E-007-141]

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Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE) is a kind of enterococci, which shows resistance toward antibiotics. It may last for a long period of time and meanwhile transmit the vancomycin-resistant gene (vanA) to other bacteria. In the United States alone, the resistant rate of Enterococcus to vancomycin increased from a mere 0.3% to a whopping 40% in the past two decades. Therefore, timely diagnosis and control of VRE is of great need so that clinicians can prevent patients from becoming infected. Nowadays, VRE is diagnosed by antibiotic susceptibility test or molecular diagnosis assays such as matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time-of-flight mass spectrometry and polymerase chain reaction. However, the existing diagnostic methods have some drawbacks, for example, time-consumption, no genetic information, or high false-positive rate. This study reports an integrated microfluidic system, which can automatically identify the vancomycin resistant gene (vanA) from live bacteria in clinical samples. A new approach using ethidium monoazide, nucleic acid specific probes, low temperature chemical lysis, and loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) has been presented. The experimental results showed that the developed system can detect the vanA gene from live Enterococcus in joint fluid samples with detection limit as low as 10 colony formation units/reaction within 1 h. This is the first time that an integrated microfluidic system has been demonstrated to detect vanA gene from live bacteria by using the LAMP approach. With its high sensitivity and accuracy, the proposed system may be useful to monitor antibiotic resistance genes from live bacteria in clinical samples in the near future. Published by AIP Publishing.

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