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Application of DNA Microarray Technology for Wastewater Analysis (Paperback)
Loot Price: R3,219
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Application of DNA Microarray Technology for Wastewater Analysis (Paperback)
Series: WERF Research Report Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) microarrays are widely used for
differential expression studies and for detection of virulence
genes in pure bacterial cultures. Their use in complex microbial
samples, such as soil and wastewater, has been relatively less
studied. This report presents the results of a systematic effort to
apply DNA microarrays to pathogen detection and to bacterial source
tracking (BST) in wastewater. Parameters such as the method of DNA
extraction from the samples, the type of immobilized probe (whether
polymerase chain reaction [PCR] amplicons or oligonucleotides), the
length and method of immobilization of oligonucleotides, the method
of DNA labelling, the combination of PCR amplification with
microarray hybridization and the choice of PCR targets have been
optimized. Results indicate that the combination of PCR followed by
microarray hybridization can detect pathogens in wastewater samples
down to a 0.1% detection limit. The use of microarrays for
bacterial source tracking gave promising results on human samples,
however the probes used in this study only provided signals for
general indicators of fecal contamination when used on samples of
animal origin. The overall conclusion is that microarray technology
has not yet reached the stage of routine use for microbiological
analysis of wastewater. This report demonstrates: That the
hybridization of total genomic DNA on microarrays has a high
detection limit, of the order of 10^7 genomes; That the use of long
oligonucleotides or PCR amplicons from 16S rDNA, or cpn60 probes
has insufficient specificity to differentiate several important
pathogens, especially within the Enterobacteriaceae family; That
the use of short oligonucleotide immobilized probes coupled with
PCR amplification of conserved genes, such as 16S rDNA, cpn60, or
wecE, can detect pathogens in wastewater down to a 0.1% (DNA
weight/weight) concentration; and The potential of DNA microarrays
in BST, even if further research work remains necessary to achieve
this goal.
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