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Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients

Definitive diagnosis of infectious diseases, including food poisoning, requires culture and identification of the infectious agent. We described how antibodies could be used to shorten this cumbersome process. Specifically, we employed an anti-Salmonella lipopolysaccharide O12 monoclonal antibody in...

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Autores principales: Nugraha, Jusak, Marpaung, Ferdy R., Tam, Frankie C. H., Lim, Pak Leong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3500315/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23166719
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049586
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author Nugraha, Jusak
Marpaung, Ferdy R.
Tam, Frankie C. H.
Lim, Pak Leong
author_facet Nugraha, Jusak
Marpaung, Ferdy R.
Tam, Frankie C. H.
Lim, Pak Leong
author_sort Nugraha, Jusak
collection PubMed
description Definitive diagnosis of infectious diseases, including food poisoning, requires culture and identification of the infectious agent. We described how antibodies could be used to shorten this cumbersome process. Specifically, we employed an anti-Salmonella lipopolysaccharide O12 monoclonal antibody in an epitope-inhibition 10-min test (TUBEX TP) to detect O12(+) Salmonella organisms directly from routine blood culture broths. The aim is to obviate the need to subculture the broth and subsequently identify the colonies. Thus, blood from 78 young outpatients suspected of having enteric fever was incubated in an enrichment broth, and after 2 or 4 days, broth samplings were examined by TUBEX TP as well as by conventional agar culture and identification. TUBEX TP was performed before the culture results. Eighteen isolates of S. Typhi (15 after 2 days) and 10 isolates of S. Paratyphi A (4 after 2 days) were obtained by conventional culture. Both these Salmonella serotypes, the main causes of enteric fever, share the O12 antigen. In all instances where either of these organisms was present (cultured), TUBEX TP was positive (score 4 [light blue] – to – score 10 [dark blue]; negative is 0 [pink-colored]) i.e. 100% sensitive. Identification of the specific Salmonella serotype in TUBEX-positive cases was achieved subsequently by conventional slide agglutination using appropriate polyclonal antisera against the various serotypes. Twelve Escherichia coli, 1 Alcaligenes spp. and 1 Enterobacter spp. were isolated. All of these cases, including all the 36 culture-negative broths, were TUBEX-negative i.e. TUBEX TP was 100% specific. In a separate study using known laboratory strains, TUBEX TF, which detects S. Typhi but not S. Paratyphi A via the O9 antigen, was found to efficiently complement TUBEX TP as a differential test. Thus, TUBEX TP and TUBEX TF are useful adjuncts to conventional culture because they can save considerable time (>2 days), costs and manpower.
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spelling pubmed-35003152012-11-19 Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients Nugraha, Jusak Marpaung, Ferdy R. Tam, Frankie C. H. Lim, Pak Leong PLoS One Research Article Definitive diagnosis of infectious diseases, including food poisoning, requires culture and identification of the infectious agent. We described how antibodies could be used to shorten this cumbersome process. Specifically, we employed an anti-Salmonella lipopolysaccharide O12 monoclonal antibody in an epitope-inhibition 10-min test (TUBEX TP) to detect O12(+) Salmonella organisms directly from routine blood culture broths. The aim is to obviate the need to subculture the broth and subsequently identify the colonies. Thus, blood from 78 young outpatients suspected of having enteric fever was incubated in an enrichment broth, and after 2 or 4 days, broth samplings were examined by TUBEX TP as well as by conventional agar culture and identification. TUBEX TP was performed before the culture results. Eighteen isolates of S. Typhi (15 after 2 days) and 10 isolates of S. Paratyphi A (4 after 2 days) were obtained by conventional culture. Both these Salmonella serotypes, the main causes of enteric fever, share the O12 antigen. In all instances where either of these organisms was present (cultured), TUBEX TP was positive (score 4 [light blue] – to – score 10 [dark blue]; negative is 0 [pink-colored]) i.e. 100% sensitive. Identification of the specific Salmonella serotype in TUBEX-positive cases was achieved subsequently by conventional slide agglutination using appropriate polyclonal antisera against the various serotypes. Twelve Escherichia coli, 1 Alcaligenes spp. and 1 Enterobacter spp. were isolated. All of these cases, including all the 36 culture-negative broths, were TUBEX-negative i.e. TUBEX TP was 100% specific. In a separate study using known laboratory strains, TUBEX TF, which detects S. Typhi but not S. Paratyphi A via the O9 antigen, was found to efficiently complement TUBEX TP as a differential test. Thus, TUBEX TP and TUBEX TF are useful adjuncts to conventional culture because they can save considerable time (>2 days), costs and manpower. Public Library of Science 2012-11-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3500315/ /pubmed/23166719 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049586 Text en © 2012 Nugraha et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nugraha, Jusak
Marpaung, Ferdy R.
Tam, Frankie C. H.
Lim, Pak Leong
Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients
title Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients
title_full Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients
title_fullStr Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients
title_full_unstemmed Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients
title_short Microbiological Culture Simplified Using Anti-O12 Monoclonal Antibody in TUBEX Test to Detect Salmonella Bacteria from Blood Culture Broths of Enteric Fever Patients
title_sort microbiological culture simplified using anti-o12 monoclonal antibody in tubex test to detect salmonella bacteria from blood culture broths of enteric fever patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3500315/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23166719
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0049586
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