scholarly journals Molecular Methods in Food Safety Microbiology: Interpretation and Implications of Nucleic Acid Detection

2014 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 551-577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siele Ceuppens ◽  
Dan Li ◽  
Mieke Uyttendaele ◽  
Pierre Renault ◽  
Paul Ross ◽  
...  
Science ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 368 (6495) ◽  
pp. 1135-1140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason Qian ◽  
Zhi-xiang Lu ◽  
Christopher P. Mancuso ◽  
Han-Ying Jhuang ◽  
Rocío del Carmen Barajas-Ornelas ◽  
...  

Determining where an object has been is a fundamental challenge for human health, commerce, and food safety. Location-specific microbes in principle offer a cheap and sensitive way to determine object provenance. We created a synthetic, scalable microbial spore system that identifies object provenance in under 1 hour at meter-scale resolution and near single-spore sensitivity and can be safely introduced into and recovered from the environment. This system solves the key challenges in object provenance: persistence in the environment, scalability, rapid and facile decoding, and biocontainment. Our system is compatible with SHERLOCK, a Cas13a RNA-guided nucleic acid detection assay, facilitating its implementation in a wide range of applications.


The Analyst ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sidhartha Jain ◽  
David S. Dandy ◽  
Brian Geiss ◽  
Charles Henry

Sensitive, reliable and cost-effective detection of pathogens has wide ranging applications in clinical diagnostics and therapeutics, water and food safety, environmental monitoring, biosafety and epidemiology. Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs)...


Author(s):  
Alain Laurent ◽  
Arnaud Burr ◽  
Thibault Martin ◽  
Frédéric Lasnet ◽  
Sébastien Hauser ◽  
...  

Open Medicine ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 271-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koray Ergunay ◽  
Gulcin Altinok ◽  
Bora Gurel ◽  
Ahmet Pinar ◽  
Arzu Sungur ◽  
...  

AbstractIntrauterine Parvovirus B19 infections may cause fetal anemia, non-immune hydrops fetalis or abortion. This study focuses on the pathogenic role of Parvovirus B19 in non-immune hydrops fetalis at Hacettepe University, a major reference hospital in Turkey. Twenty-two cases of non-immune hydrops fetalis were retrospectively selected out of a total of 431 hydrops fetalis specimens from the Department of Pathology archieves. Paraffine embedded tissue sections from placental and liver tissues from each case were evaluated by histopathology, immunohistochemistry, nested PCR and commercial quantitative Real-time PCR. Viral DNA was detected in placental tissues by Real-time PCR in 2 cases (2/22, 9.1%) where histopathology also revealed changes suggestive of Parvovirus B19 infection. No significant histopathologic changes were observed for the remaining sections. Nested PCR that targets the VP1 region of the viral genome and immunohistochemistry for viral capsid antigens were negative for all cases. As a result, Parvovirus B19 is identified as the etiologic agent for the development of non-immune hydrops fetalis for 9.1% of the cases in Hacettepe University, Turkey. Real-time PCR is observed to be an effective diagnostic tool for nucleic acid detection from paraffine embedded tissues. Part of this study was presented as a poster at XIIIth International Congress of Virology, San Francisco, USA (Abstract V-572).


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