RPB0314

Pathogen Description

Target Pathogen Pathogen Name NCBI Taxonomy ID Order Family Genus Species Pathogen type
Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus aureus, Micrococcus aureus, Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus 1280 Bacillales Staphylococcaceae Staphylococcus Staphylococcus aureus Bacterium

Primer Description

Primer Name Sequence(5'-3') Length(bp) Primer Final Concentration(μM) GC Content(%) Predicted Melting Temperature(℃) Molecular Weight(g/moles) Positions in GenBank accession number
RPA-1-F GCATCACAAACAGATAACGGCGTAAATAGAAG 32 \ 40.63 59.09 9892.54 \
RPA-1-R ACATTAATTTAACCGTATCACCATCAATCGCT 32 \ 34.38 57.47 9686.39 \

Gene Description

Target Gene GenBank ID
nuc gene \

Assay Description

Application Assay Primer Designing Software Reaction Time(min) Assay Temperature(℃) Readout System(s) Limit of Detection(LoD) Sensitivity(%) Specificity(%)
This simple and sensitive method is valuable for S. aureus detection, especially in resource-limited areas. RPA-CBD- Cas12a \ 30 min 37°C CBD- Cas12a 1 × 10² CFU\mL \ \

Publication Description

Year of Publication Title Author(s) Journal PMID DOI
2024 Engineering the bacteriophage 80 alpha endolysin as a fast and ultrasensitive detection toolbox against Staphylococcus aureus Feng Zhao,Yixi Yang,Wenyao Zhan,Zhiqi Li,Hui Yin,Jingjing Deng,Waner Li,Rui Li,Qi Zhao,Jian Li Biosensors and Bioelectronics 39232433 10.1016/j.bios.2024.116727

Engineering the bacteriophage 80 alpha endolysin as a fast and ultrasensitive detection toolbox against Staphylococcus aureus

Author(s):

Feng Zhao,Yixi Yang,Wenyao Zhan,Zhiqi Li,Hui Yin,Jingjing Deng,Waner Li,Rui Li,Qi Zhao,Jian Li

Journal:

Biosensors and Bioelectronics

Year:

2024

Abstract:

The isolation and identification of pathogenic bacteria from a variety of samples are critical for controlling bacterial infection-related health problems. The conventional methods, such as plate counting and polymerase chain reaction-based approaches, tend to be time-consuming and reliant on specific instruments, severely limiting the effective identification of these pathogens. In this study, we employed the specificity of the cell wall-binding (CBD) domain of the Staphylococcus aureus bacteriophage 80 alpha (80α) endolysin towards the host bacteria for isolation. Amidase 3-CBD conjugated magnetic beads successfully isolated as few as 1 × 102 CFU/mL of S. aureus cells from milk, blood, and saliva. The cell wall hydrolyzing activity of 80α endolysin promoted the genomic DNA extraction efficiency by 12.7 folds on average, compared to the commercial bacterial genomic DNA extraction kit. Then, recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) was exploited to amplify the nuc gene of S. aureus from the extracted DNA at 37 °C for 30 min. The RPA product activated Cas12a endonuclease activity to cleave fluorescently labeled ssDNA probes. We then converted the generated signal into a fluorescent readout, detectable by either the naked eye or a portable, self-assembled instrument with ultrasensitivity. The entire procedure, from isolation to identification, can be completed within 2 h. The simplicity and sensitivity of the method developed in this study make it of great application value in S. aureus detection, especially in areas with limited resource supply.