Research Notes
Bacteriology
The exclusion of dead bacterial cells is essential for accurate molecular analysis of clinical samples

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-0691.2010.03189.xGet rights and content
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Abstract

The DNA-based techniques used to detect bacteria in clinical samples are unable to discriminate between live bacteria, dead bacteria, and extracellular DNA. This failure to limit analysis to viable bacterial cells represents a significant problem, leading to false-positive results, as well as a failure to resolve the impact of antimicrobial therapy. The use of propidium monoazide treatment significantly reduces the contribution of dead cells and extracellular DNA to such culture-independent analyses. Here, the increased ability to resolve the impact of antibiotic therapy on Pseudomonas aeruginosa load in cystic fibrosis respiratory samples reveals statistically significant changes that would otherwise go undetected.

Keywords

Antibiotic treatment
bacterial viability
cystic fibrosis
propidium monoazide
Q-PCR

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Article published online: 9 February 2010

Editor: J.-M. Rolain