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Bacteriophage reporter technology for sensing and detecting microbial targets

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 400, Issue 4, Pages 991-1007

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-010-4561-3

Keywords

Bacteriophage; Bioreporter; Biosensor; Pathogen; Phage; Reporter gene

Funding

  1. US Department of Agriculture
  2. NASA
  3. Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Command
  4. Office of Naval Research
  5. Army Defense University

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Bacteriophages (phages) are bacterial viruses evolutionarily tuned to very specifically recognize, infect, and propagate within only a unique pool of host cells. Knowledge of these phage host ranges permits one to devise diagnostic tests based on phage-host recognition profiles. For decades, fundamental phage typing assays have been used to identify bacterial pathogens on the basis of the ability of phages to kill, or lyse, the unique species, strain, or serovar to which they are naturally targeted. Over time, and with a better understanding of phage-host kinetics and the realization that there exists a phage specific for nearly any bacterial pathogen of clinical, foodborne, or waterborne consequence, a variety of improved, rapid, sensitive, and easy-to-use phage-mediated detection assays have been developed. These assays exploit every stage of the phage recognition and infection cycle to yield a wide variety of pathogen monitoring, detection, and enumeration formats that are steadily advancing toward new biosensor integrations and advanced sensing technologies.

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