Pitruzzello Giampaolo, Johnson Steven, Krauss Thomas F
School of Physics, Engineering and Technology, University of York, YO10 5DD, York, UK.
School of Physics, Engineering and Technology, University of York, YO10 5DD, York, UK.
Biosens Bioelectron. 2023 Mar 15;224:115056. doi: 10.1016/j.bios.2022.115056. Epub 2022 Dec 30.
Many novel susceptibility tests are being developed to tackle the worldwide problem of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The key driver behind these developments, that is the need to reduce the response time, requires an understanding of which bacterial characteristic needs to be monitored to provide a rapid and ideally universal signature of susceptibility. Many characteristics have already been studied, most notably bacterial growth, metabolism and motility. Here, we consider electrical impedance to directly access bacterial metabolism, which can be considered a fundamental indicator of bacterial viability. By studying the electrical response of individual bacteria to an antibiotic challenge, we detect antimicrobial action close to its biological limit. Specifically, we find that it takes 30-60 min to register significant changes in impedance for clinical concentrations of antibiotics, in line with other rapid indicators. Our findings suggest that 60 min is the fundamental lower limit of response time for a realistic susceptibility test at clinically relevant antibiotic concentrations.
为应对全球抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)问题,许多新型药敏试验正在研发中。这些研发背后的关键驱动力,即缩短响应时间的需求,要求我们了解需要监测哪些细菌特征,以便提供快速且理想的通用药敏特征。许多特征已经得到研究,最显著的是细菌生长、代谢和运动性。在此,我们考虑通过电阻抗直接获取细菌代谢情况,细菌代谢可被视为细菌活力的一个基本指标。通过研究单个细菌对抗生素挑战的电响应,我们检测到接近其生物学极限的抗菌作用。具体而言,我们发现对于临床浓度的抗生素,记录到阻抗的显著变化需要30 - 60分钟,这与其他快速指标一致。我们的研究结果表明,对于临床相关抗生素浓度下的实际药敏试验,60分钟是响应时间的基本下限。