4.6 Article

An electronic DNA microarray technique for detection and differentiation of viable Campylobacter species

Journal

ANALYST
Volume 131, Issue 8, Pages 907-915

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b603315f

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An electronic oligonucleotide microarray technique was developed for detection and differentiation of the viable Campylobacter species, C. jejuni, C. coli, and C. lari. This development consisted of four major components: identification of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the hsp60 gene as species markers, design of fluorescently labelled SNP-based reporters, development of an electronic microarray detection, and application of the integrated technique to analysis of Campylobacter species in food samples. A unique capability of this technique is the specific detection of viable cells and not dead ones. This is achieved by using mRNA of the 60 kDa heat-shock protein as the viability marker. The identification of two unique SNPs closely located at positions 291 and 294 of the hsp60 gene enabled the differentiation of the three Campylobacter species. This technique was able to detect as few as two viable Campylobacter cells. The analysis of 19 blind Campylobacter samples showed 100% agreement with their identities obtained using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. The analysis of six chicken samples revealed the presence of C. coli in one of the samples.

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