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1.
16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes for Bacteria (Eub338) and Archaea (Arc915) were used for whole-cell, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to quantify the ratio of these microbial groups in an anaerobic digester. The quantity of specifically bound (hybridized) probe was measured by fluorescence spectrometry and evaluated by analysing the dissociation curve of the hybrids, by the measurement of the binding with a nonsense probe, and by the competitive inhibition of the binding of the labelled probe by the corresponding unlabelled probe. Specific binding of oligonucleotide probes with the biomass of anaerobes was 40–50% of their total binding. The ratio of Arc915 and Eub338 probes hybridized with rRNAs of the cells in anaerobic sludge was 0.50. Measurement of FISH by fluorescence spectrometry appears to be a suitable method for quantification of the microbial community of anaerobes.  相似文献   

2.
Aims: We developed an improved Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization FISH‐based method to detect viable Escherichia coli cells by solid phase cytometry (SPC), and results were compared to those obtained by the standard culture method. Methods and Results: The method includes a direct viable count (DVC) assay, multi‐probes labelled and unlabelled (helpers) to detect specifically viable E. coli cells and to enhance SPC cell counts. We demonstrate that helpers increase the fluorescence intensity of hybridized E. coli cells as detected by SPC and assess the high specificity of the DVC–FISH procedure on a large panel of cultured strains. Application to seawater, freshwater and wastewater samples showed a good correlation between SPC cells counts and standard plate counts. Conclusion: The high specificity of the procedure was demonstrated as well as its accuracy for detecting and counting viable E. coli cells in environmental samples. Significance and Impact of the Study: The developed approach may be used to monitor faecal contamination sources and to investigate the occurrence of viable E. coli in natural environments.  相似文献   

3.
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes is a method that is widely used to detect and quantify microorganisms in environmental samples and medical specimens by fluorescence microscopy. Difficulties with FISH arise if the rRNA content of the probe target organisms is low, causing dim fluorescence signals that are not detectable against the background fluorescence. This limitation is ameliorated by technical modifications such as catalyzed reporter deposition (CARD)-FISH, but the minimal numbers of rRNA copies needed to obtain a visible signal of a microbial cell after FISH or CARD-FISH have not been determined previously. In this study, a novel competitive FISH approach was developed and used to determine, based on a thermodynamic model of probe competition, the numbers of 16S rRNA copies per cell required to detect bacteria by FISH and CARD-FISH with oligonucleotide probes in mixed pure cultures and in activated sludge. The detection limits of conventional FISH with Cy3-labeled probe EUB338-I were found to be 370 ± 45 16S rRNA molecules per cell for Escherichia coli hybridized on glass microscope slides and 1,400 ± 170 16S rRNA copies per E. coli cell in activated sludge. For CARD-FISH the values ranged from 8.9 ± 1.5 to 14 ± 2 and from 36 ± 6 to 54 ± 7 16S rRNA molecules per cell, respectively, indicating that the sensitivity of CARD-FISH was 26- to 41-fold higher than that of conventional FISH. These results suggest that optimized FISH protocols using oligonucleotide probes could be suitable for more recent applications of FISH (for example, to detect mRNA in situ in microbial cells).  相似文献   

4.
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) is a widely used method to detect environmental microorganisms. The standard protocol is typically conducted at a temperature of 46°C and a hybridization time of 2 or 3 h, using the fluorescence signal intensity as the sole parameter to evaluate the performance of FISH. This paper reports our results for optimizing the conditions of FISH using rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes and flow cytometry and the application of these protocols to the detection of Escherichia coli in seawater spiked with E.coli culture. We obtained two types of optimized protocols for FISH, which showed rapid results with a hybridization time of less than 30 min, with performance equivalent to or better than the standard protocol in terms of the fluorescence signal intensity and the FISH hybridization efficiency (i.e., the percentage of hybridized cells giving satisfactory fluorescence intensity): (i) one-step FISH (hybridization is conducted at 60 to 75°C for 30 min) and (ii) two-step FISH (pretreatment in a 90°C water bath for 5 min and a hybridizing step at 50 to 55°C for 15 to 20 min). We also found that satisfactory fluorescence signal intensity does not necessarily guarantee satisfactory hybridization efficiency and the tightness of the targeted population when analyzed with a flow cytometer. We subsequently successfully applied the optimized protocols to E. coli-spiked seawater samples, i.e., obtained flow cytometric signatures where the E. coli population was well separated from other particles carrying fluorescence from nonspecific binding to probes or from autofluorescence, and had a good recovery rate of the spiked E. coli cells (90%).  相似文献   

5.
16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes for eubacteria (EUB338), ammonium-oxidizing bacteria (Nsm156) and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (Nb1000) were used for the rapid detection of nitrifying bacteria in the activated sludge of a pilot nitrifying reactor by whole-cell, fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Emission scanning and synchronous scanning fluorescence spectrometry were used to measure the hybridization. The binding of the probes at a temperature significantly lower than the melting temperature of the hybrids was conventionally considered as non-specific. Total binding of the probes at a temperature significantly higher than the melting temperature of the hybrids was conventionally considered as the sum of non-specific and specific binding (hybridization). Non-specific binding of the oligonucleotide probes with a biomass of activated sludge was 37% of the total binding of the EUB338 probe, 54% of the total binding of the Nsm156 probe, and 69% of the total binding of the Nb1000 probe. The ratio of the specific binding of the Nsm156 and Nb1000 probes was 2.3:1. The ratio of the numbers of ammonium-oxidizing bacteria to nitrite-oxidizing bacteria, determined by microbiological methods, was 2.4:1. Measuring fluorescent in situ hybridization by fluorescence spectrometry appears to be a practical tool for monitoring the microbial communities that contain nitrifying bacteria. However, a method that accounts for the non-specific binding of the probes more easily and reliably should be developed for practical application.  相似文献   

6.
This study used Fluorescent in situ Hybridisation (FISH) with rRNA targeted oligonucleotide probes combined with scanning confocal laser microscopy to successfully detect Legionella spp. in commercially available potting mix. A range of techniques were explored to optimise the FISH method by reducing background fluorescence and preventing non-specific binding of probes. These techniques included the use of a blocking agent, UV light treatment, image subtraction of a nonsense probe and spectral unmixing of specific probes fluorescence and autofluorescence dependent on the specific emission spectra of probe fluorophores.Spectral unmixing was the best microscopy technique for reducing background fluorescence and non-specific binding of probes was not observed. The rapid turnaround time and increased sensitivity of the FISH provides as an alternative to traditional culture methods, which are tedious and often give varied results. FISH is also advantageous compared to PCR methods as it provides information on the structure of the microbial community the bacteria is situated in. This study demonstrates that FISH could provide an alternative method for Legionella detection and enumeration in environmental samples.  相似文献   

7.
Target site inaccessibility represents a significant problem for fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) of 16S rRNA with oligonucleotide probes. Here, unlabeled oligonucleotides (helpers) that bind adjacent to the probe target site were evaluated for their potential to increase weak probe hybridization signals in Escherichia coli DSM 30083T. The use of helpers enhanced the fluorescence signal of all six probes examined at least fourfold. In one case, the signal of probe Eco474 was increased 25-fold with the use of a single helper probe, H440-2. In another case, four unlabeled helpers raised the FISH signal of a formerly weak probe, Eco585, to the level of the brightest monolabeled oligonucleotide probes available for E. coli. The temperature of dissociation and the mismatch discrimination of probes were not significantly influenced by the addition of helpers. Therefore, using helpers should not cause labeling of additional nontarget organisms at a defined stringency of hybridization. However, the helper action is based on sequence-specific binding, and there is thus a potential for narrowing the target group which must be considered when designing helpers. We conclude that helpers can open inaccessible rRNA regions for FISH with oligonucleotide probes and will thereby further improve the applicability of this technique for in situ identification of microorganisms.  相似文献   

8.
Slime formation is a serious problem nowadays in the paper industry. Some enterobacteria are associated with the formation of slime deposits in paper and board mills. Detection and characterization of slime forming bacteria, belonging to the genus Enterobacter, Raoultella, and Klebsiella have been achieved by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), using one probe based on the enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus sequence and other two rRNA targeted oligonucleotide probes. The effects of three kinds of antimicrobiological products (biocides, dispersants, and enzymes) on these enterobacterial cells were analyzed by flow cytometry (FC). Biocides Butrol 1009 and 1072 were the most effective microbiocides against all enterobacterial cells analyzed, reaching 90% of dead bacteria after 24 h. However, the enzymatic treatment (Buzyme) was not equally efficient on enterobacteria and its microbiocide capacity varied depending on the type of microorganism. FISH and FC were effective tools to detect important slime forming enterobacteria and to select specific treatments to control microbial problems in the paper industry.  相似文献   

9.
A peptide nucleic acid (PNA) probe was developed to detect the toxic dinoflagellate, Takayama pulchella TPXM, using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) combined with epifluorescent microscopy and flow cytometry. The PNA probe was then used to analyze HAB samples from Xiamen Bay. The results indicated that the fluorescein phosphoramidite (FAM)-labeled probe (PNATP28S01) [Flu]-OO ATG CCA TCT CAA GA, entered the algal cells easily and bound to the target species specifically. High hybridization efficiency (nearly 100%) was observed. Detection by epifluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry gave comparable results. The fluorescence intensity of the PNA probe hybridized to T. pulchella cells was remarkably higher than that of two DNA probes used in this study and than the autofluorescence of the blank and negative control cells. In addition, the hybridization condition of the PNA probe was easier to control than DNA probes, and when applied to field-collected samples, the PNA probe showed higher binding efficiency to the target species than DNA probes. With the observed high specificity, binding efficiency, and detection signal intensity, the PNA probe will be useful for monitoring harmful algal blooms of T. pulchella.  相似文献   

10.
Chlamydiae are important pathogens of humans and animals but diagnosis of chlamydial infections is still hampered by inadequate detection methods. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes is widely used for the investigation of uncultured bacteria in complex microbial communities and has recently also been shown to be a valuable tool for the rapid detection of various bacterial pathogens in clinical specimens. Here we report on the development and evaluation of a hierarchic probe set for the specific detection and differentiation of chlamydiae, particularly C. pneumoniae, C. trachomatis, C. psittaci, and the recently described chlamydia-like bacteria comprising the novel genera Neochlamydia and Parachlamydia. The specificity of the nine newly developed probes was successfully demonstrated by in situ hybridization of experimentally infected amoebae and HeLa 229 cells, including HeLa 229 cells coinfected with C. pneumoniae and C. trachomatis. FISH reliably stained chlamydial inclusions as early as 12 h postinfection. The sensitivity of FISH was further confirmed by combination with direct fluorescence antibody staining. In contrast to previously established detection methods for chlamydiae, FISH was not susceptible to false-positive results and allows the detection of all recognized chlamydiae in one single step.  相似文献   

11.
Target site inaccessibility represents a significant problem for fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) of 16S rRNA oligonucleotide probes. For this reason, the Clep1156 probe targeting 16S rRNA of the Clostridium leptum phylogenetic subgroup used for dot blot experiments could not be used until now for FISH. Considering that bacteria from the C. leptum subgroup are very abundant in the human faecal microbiota and may play a significant role in host health, we have used unlabelled helper and competitor oligonucleotides to improve the 16S rRNA in situ accessibility and specificity of the Clep1156 probe and applied this approach to enumerate C. leptum bacteria in this ecosystem. Nine C. leptum target strains and five non-target strains were selected to develop and validate the helper-competitor strategy. Depending on the target strains, the use of helpers enhanced the fluorescence intensity signal of Clep1156 from 0.4-fold to 8.4-fold with a mean value of 3.6-fold, switching this probe from the brightness class V-VI (masked sites) to III-IV (accessible sites). The simultaneous use of helper and competitor oligonucleotides with Clep1156 probe allowed the expected specificity without disturbing in situ accessibility. Quantified by FISH combined with flow cytometry, C. leptum bacteria in human faecal samples (n=22) represented 19 +/- 7% of bacteria on average [4.9-37.5]. We conclude that helper oligonucleotides are very useful to circumvent the problem of target site in situ accessibility, especially when probe design is limited to only one 16S rRNA area and that helpers and competitors may be efficiently combined.  相似文献   

12.
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) has proven to be most useful for the identification of microorganisms. However, species-specific oligonucleotide probes often fail to give satisfactory results. Among the causes leading to low hybridization signals is the reduced accessibility of the targeted rRNA site to the oligonucleotide, mainly for structural reasons. In this study we used flow cytometry to determine whole-cell fluorescence intensities with a set of 32 Cy3-labeled oligonucleotide probes covering the full length of the D1 and D2 domains in the 26S rRNA of Saccharomyces cerevisiae PYCC 4455T. The brightest signal was obtained with a probe complementary to positions 223 to 240. Almost half of the probes conferred a fluorescence intensity above 60% of the maximum, whereas only one probe could hardly detect the cells. The accessibility map based on the results obtained can be extrapolated to other yeasts, as shown experimentally with 27 additional species (14 ascomycetes and 13 basidiomycetes). This work contributes to a more rational design of species-specific probes for yeast identification and monitoring.  相似文献   

13.

Background  

Taxon specific hybridization probes in combination with a variety of commonly used hybridization formats nowadays are standard tools in microbial identification. A frequently applied technology, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), besides single cell identification, allows the localization and functional studies of the microbial community composition. Careful in silico design and evaluation of potential oligonucleotide probe targets is therefore crucial for performing successful hybridization experiments.  相似文献   

14.
Comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) was used to identify and probe sex chromosomes in several XY and WZ systems. Chromosomes were hybridized simultaneously with FluorX-labelled DNA of females and Cy3-labelled DNA of males in the presence of an excess of Cot-1 DNA or unlabelled DNA of the homogametic sex. CGH visualized the molecular differentiation of the X and Y in the house mouse, Mus musculus, and in Drosophila melanogaster: while autosomes were stained equally by both probes, the X and Y chromosomes were stained preferentially by the female-derived or the male-derived probe, respectively. There was no differential staining of the X and Y chromosomes in the fly Megaselia scalaris, indicating an early stage of sex chromosome differentiation in this species. In the human and the house mouse, labelled DNA of males in the presence of unlabelled DNA of females was sufficient to highlight Y chromosomes in mitosis and interphase. In WZ sex chromosome systems, the silkworm Bombyx mori, the flour moth Ephestia kuehniella, and the wax moth Galleria mellonella, the W chromosomes were identified by CGH in mitosis and meiosis. They were conspicuously stained by both female- and male-derived probes, unlike the Z chromosomes, which were preferentially stained by the male-derived probe in E. kuehniella only but were otherwise inconspicuous. The ratio of female:male staining and the pattern of staining along the W chromosomes was species specific. CGH shows that W chromosomes in these species are molecularly well differentiated from the Z chromosomes. The conspicuous binding of the male-derived probe to the W chromosomes is presumably due to an accumulation of common interspersed repetitive sequences. Received: 6 January 1999; in revised form: 28 January 1999 / Accepted: 11 February 1999  相似文献   

15.
Although fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with specific ribosomal RNA (rRNA)‐targeted oligonucleotides is a standard method to detect and identify microorganisms, the specific detection of genes in bacteria and archaea, for example by using geneFISH, requires complicated and lengthy (> 30 h) procedures. Here we report a much improved protocol, direct‐geneFISH, which allows specific gene and rRNA detection within less than 6 h. For direct‐geneFISH, catalyzed amplification reporter deposition (CARD) steps are removed and fluorochrome‐labelled polynucleotide gene probes and rRNA‐targeted oligonucleotide probes are hybridized simultaneously. The protocol allows quantification of gene copy numbers per cell and the signal of the directly labelled probes enables a subcellular localization of the rRNA and target gene. The detection efficiencies of direct‐geneFISH were first evaluated on Escherichia coli carrying the target gene on a copy‐control vector. We could show that gene copy numbers correlated to the geneFISH signal within the cells. The new protocol was then applied for the detection of the sulfate thiolhydrolase (soxB) genes in cells of the gammaproteobacterial clade SUP05 in Lake Rogoznica, Croatia. Cell and gene detection efficiencies by direct‐geneFISH were statistically identical to those obtained with the original geneFISH, demonstrating the suitability of the simpler and faster protocol for environmental samples.  相似文献   

16.
The genus Alcanivorax comprises diverse hydrocarbon-degrading marine bacteria. Novel 16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide DNA probes (ALV735 and ALV735-b) were developed to quantify two subgroups of the Alcanivorax / Fundibacter group by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and the conditions for the single-mismatch discrimination of the probes were optimized. The specificity of the probes was improved further using a singly mismatched oligonucleotide as a competitor. The growth of Alcanivorax cells in crude oil-contaminated sea water under the biostimulation condition was investigated by FISH with the probe ALV735, which targeted the main cluster of the Alcanivorax / Fundibacter group. The size of the Alcanivorax population increased with increasing incubation time and accounted for 91% of the 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) count after incubation for 2 weeks. The probes developed in this study are useful for detecting Alcanivorax populations in petroleum hydrocarbon-degrading microbial consortia.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Formation and activity of bacterial nitrifying biofilms play an important role in the closed seawater systems for shrimp cultivation. The structure of microbial biofilm on empty oyster shells, used as a biofilm carrier in biofiltration of aquacultural water, was studied using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and confocal laser scanning microscopy. FISH was performed with specific oligonucleotide probes for Bacteria and ammonia-oxidizing Nitrosomonas spp. The bacterial cells were arranged within the biofilm as a layer of vertically elongated aggregates. Aggregates of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria were embedded within the matrix formed by other bacteria. Vertically elongated cell aggregates may be ecologically important in bacterial biofilms because they have a higher surface-to-volume ratio than that of laminated biofilms.  相似文献   

18.
New oligonucleotide probes were designed and evaluated for application in fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) studies on (hyper)thermophilic microbial communities—Arglo32, Tcoc164, and Aqui1197 target the 16S rRNA of Archaeoglobales, Thermococcales, and Aquificales, respectively. Both sequence information and experimental evaluation showed high coverage and specificity of all three probes. The signal intensity of Aqui1197 was improved by addition of a newly designed, unlabeled helper oligonucleotide, hAqui1045. It was shown that in addition to its function as a probe for Aquificales, Aqui1197 is suitable as a supplementary probe to extend the coverage of the domain-specific bacterial probe EUB338. In sediments from two hydrothermal seeps on Vulcano Island, Italy, the microbial community structure was analyzed by FISH with both established and the new oligonucleotide probes, showing the applicability of Arglo32, Tcoc164, and Aqui1197/hAqui1045 to natural samples. At both sites, all major groups of (hyper)thermophiles, except for methanogens, were detected: Crenarchaeota (19%, 16%), Thermococcales (14%, 22%), Archaeoglobales (14%, 12%), Aquificales (5%, 8%), Thermotoga/Thermosipho spp. (12%, 9%), Thermus sp. (12%, none), and thermophilic Bacillus sp. (12%, 8%).  相似文献   

19.
A novel fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) method is presented that allows the combination of epifluorescence and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to identify single microbial cells. First, the rRNA of whole cells is hybridised with horseradish peroxidase-labelled oligonucleotide probes and this is followed by catalysed reporter deposition (CARD) of biotinylated tyramides. This facilitates an amplification of binding sites for streptavidin conjugates covalently labelled with both fluorophores and nanogold particles. The deposition of Alexa Fluor 488 fluoro-nanogold–streptavidin conjugates was confirmed via epifluorescence microscopy and cells could be quantified in a similar way to standard CARD–FISH approaches. To detect cells by SEM, an autometallographic enhancement of the nanogold particles was essential, and allowed the in situ localisation of the target organisms at resolutions beyond light microscopy. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) was used to verify the effects of CARD and autometallography on gold deposition in target cells.  相似文献   

20.
In situ detection of microorganisms by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) is a powerful tool for environmental microbiology, but analyses can be hampered by low rRNA content in target organisms, especially in oligotrophic environments. Here, we present a non‐enzymatic, hybridization chain reaction (HCR)‐based signal amplified in situ whole‐cell detection technique (in situ DNA‐HCR). The components of the amplification buffer were optimized to polymerize DNA amplifier probes for in situ DNA‐HCR. In situ hybridization of initiator probes followed by signal amplification via HCR produced bright signals with high specificity and probe permeation into cells. The detection rates for Bacteria in a seawater sample and Archaea in anaerobic sludge samples were comparable with or greater than those obtained by catalyzed reporter deposition (CARD)‐FISH or standard FISH. Detection of multiple organisms (Bacteria, Archaea and Methanosaetaceae) in an anaerobic sludge sample was achieved by simultaneous in situ DNA‐HCR. In summary, in situ DNA‐HCR is a simple and easy technique for detecting single microbial cells and enhancing understanding of the ecology and behaviour of environmental microorganisms in situ.  相似文献   

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