Persister Flashcards

1
Q

How to identify a persister cell

Live dead stain

A
  • Kill off the susceptible population, antibiotics
  • Isolate the persister population with microscopy, a live dead stain
  • The intact cells will take up a dye. Live= green, Red= dead
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2
Q

How to identify a persister cell

FACS

A
  • If a bacterial cell is healthy it will be expressing allof the components of a ribosome
  • Put GFP downstream of the ribosome promoter, you will have fluorescent bacteria
  • Use FACS to separate cells on size and colour
  • Fluorescent= not persister cells
  • Persister cells are not growing
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3
Q

How to identify a persister cell

Microfluidics

A
  • Visualise cells that don’t grow
  • After using antibiotics to kill cells that are growing
  • we can regrow them
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4
Q

How to identify a persister cell

Fluorescence dilution

A
  • Put a reporter gene in
  • GFP has a short half life
  • Use an inducer
  • The cells that are growing would dilute the fluorescence
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5
Q

Persister cell mechanism

A
  • They have an upregulation of genes, toxin/ antitoxins
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6
Q

Toxin/ Antitoxin

A
  • They are co located
  • When they are expressed together they negate the other
  • Bacterial cellular proteases (clpAP and lon) that are under the control of environmental factors
  • If the levels of clipAP and lon are elevated, they will degrade the antitoxin and release the toxin which will go and mediate growth arrest
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7
Q

Direct ELISA

Start with an antibody to test for an antigen

A
  • a specific antibody is adsorbed onto the walls of microwells
  • A suspension of serum is added to the wells to test for the presence of a complementary antigen
  • If there is a complementary antigen it will bind to the antibodies
  • It is strong enough to withstand rinsing, which removes the fluid and unbound antigens
  • After rinsing another aliquot of the monoclonal antibody is added to the well
  • The antibodies are modified so that they carry a reporter enzyme
  • A reporter enzyme is designed to change colour when the enzyme reacts with its substrate
  • The sample is rinsed to remove unbound antibodies
  • If the antigen is present a complex forms that includes the antibody, antigen and antibody with enzyme
  • The enzyme substrate is added
    A colour change indicates the antigen was present in the substrate
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8
Q

Indirect ELISA

Start with antigen to test for an antibody

A
  • It determines whether a specific antibody is present in a sample
  • The antigen is absorbed onto a strip of microwell
  • Serum that could contain the antibody is injected into the microwell
  • If the specific antibodies are present they will bind to the antigens
  • Rinsing removes antibodies not attached to the enzymes
  • If antibodies attach to the antigen they can be detected by the addition of an antibody enzyme conjugate
  • The reporter antibodies bind to the antibodies used in the previous stage
  • As the specimen uses human antibodies, we use enzyme conjugated anti-human IgG antibodies for the reporter
  • If the antibody was present in the sample it will be bound to the adsorbed antigen and the antibody reporter will be bound to the complex
  • It is rinsed
  • Substrate is added
  • A colour change indicates a positive result
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