17 research outputs found
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A Novel Microfluidic Dielectrophoresis Technology to Enable Rapid Diagnosis of Mycobacteria tuberculosis in Clinical Samples
To achieve the global efforts to end tuberculosis, affordable diagnostics suitable for true point-of-care implementation are required to reach the missing millions. In addition, diagnostics with increased sensitivity and expanded drug susceptibility testing are needed to address drug resistance and to diagnose low-bacterial burden cases. The laboratory-on-a-chip technology described herein used dielectrophoresis to selectively isolate Mycobacterium tuberculosis from sputum samples, purifying the bacterial population ahead of molecular confirmation by multiplex real-time quantitative PCR. After optimization using a panel of 50 characterized sputum samples, the performance of the prototype was assessed against the current gold standards, screening 100 blinded sputum samples using characterized and biobanked sputum provided by Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics. Concordance with culture diagnosis was 100% for smear-negative samples and 87% for smear-positive samples. Of the smear-positive samples, the high burden sample concordance was 100%. Samples were diagnosed on the basis of visual assessment of the dielectrophoresis array and by multiplex real-time quantitative PCR assay. The results described herein demonstrate the potential of the CAPTURE-XT technology to provide a powerful sample preparation tool that could function as a front-end platform for molecular detection. This versatile tool could equally be applied as a visual detection diagnostic, potentially associated with bacterial identification for low-cost screening or coupled with an expanded PCR assay for genotypic drug susceptibility testing
Influence of Prototropic Reactions on the Absorption and Fluorescence Spectra of Methyl p-dimethylaminobenzoate and Its Two Ortho Derivatives
The influence of prototropic reactions on the spectral characteristics of methyl p-dimethylaminobenzoate (I) and its o-methoxy (II) and o-hydroxy (III) derivatives has been studied using steady-state spectroscopic technique and quantum-chemical calculations. This study concerns the solvent-induced shift of the absorption, locally excited (LE) and intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) fluorescence bands in the neat tetrahydrofuran (THF) and its hydrochloric acid solutions at different HCl concentrations. On the basis of the experimental results and quantum-chemical calculations, it was shown that in a hydrochloric acid solution the studied molecules exist as a mixture of neutral, mono-, and dicationic forms. Additionally, the results of spectroscopic measurements were used to calculate, according to the Benesi-Hildebrand method, the equilibrium constants of protopropic reactions in the ground, S0, and excited, S1, states. Our findings predestine molecules I and II to be used as acid fluorescence probes in a region of 0–2.5 M of [H+] concentrations
THE LINESHAPE OF INFRARED-MICROWAVE TWO-PHOTON TRANSITIONS: THE BAND OF
Author Institution: Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University East LansingA computer-coupled infrared-microwave two-photon spectrometer has been used to record the lineshapes of transitions in as a function of sample pressure and microwave power. The frequency of the laser is stabilized by monitoring the saturation dip in the fluorescence from a sample in the laser cavity. A laboratory computer steps the microwave frequency and records the spectrum. The computer also records the frequency variation of the microwave power, which can be used to normalize the data to constant power. The lineshapes, as analyzed by means of the expression for a Voigt profile, appear to show significant changes in the center frequency and the Lorentz width as the microwave power is varied. The nature of these variations will be described and compared to predictions from the theory of two-photon absorption in a three-level system. This work was supported by the National Science Foundatio