Micro-Raman spectroscopic identification of bacterial cells of the genus Staphylococcus and dependence on their cultivation conditions

Literature Information

Publication Date 2005-09-30
DOI 10.1039/B507715J
Impact Factor 4.616
Authors

M. Harz, P. Rösch, K.-D. Peschke, O. Ronneberger, H. Burkhardt, J. Popp


View Original

Abstract

Microbial contamination is not only a medical problem, but also plays a large role in pharmaceutical clean room production and food processing technology. Therefore many techniques were developed to achieve differentiation and identification of microorganisms. Among these methods vibrational spectroscopic techniques (IR, Raman and SERS) are useful tools because of their rapidity and sensitivity. Recently we have shown that micro-Raman spectroscopy in combination with a support vector machine is an extremely capable approach for a fast and reliable, non-destructive online identification of single bacteria belonging to different genera. In order to simulate different environmental conditions we analyzed in this contribution different Staphylococcus strains with varying cultivation conditions in order to evaluate our method with a reliable dataset. First, micro-Raman spectra of the bulk material and single bacterial cells that were grown under the same conditions were recorded and used separately for a distinct chemotaxonomic classification of the strains. Furthermore Raman spectra were recorded from single bacterial cells that were cultured under various conditions to study the influence of cultivation on the discrimination ability. This dataset was analyzed both with a hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA) and a support vector machine (SVM).

Related Literature

Effects of Ge and Sn substitution on the metal–semiconductor transition and thermoelectric properties of Cu12Sb4S13 tetrahedrite

Yasufumi Kosaka, Koichiro Suekuni, Katsuaki Hashikuni, Yohan Bouyrie, Michihiro Ohta

2017-03-06 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C7CP00351J

A velocity map imaging study of the photodissociation of the methyl iodide cation

S. Marggi Poullain, D. V. Chicharro, L. Rubio-Lago, L. Bañares

2017-02-24 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C7CP00319F

Stripping off hydrogens in imidazole triggered by the attachment of a single electron

K. Fink, I. Carmichael, S. Denifl

2017-01-25 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C6CP08773F

Unique agreement of experimental and computational infrared spectroscopy: a case study of lithium bromide solvation in an important electrochemical solvent

Maciej Śmiechowski, Joanna Krakowiak, Piotr Bruździak, Janusz Stangret

2017-03-21 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C6CP08799J

In situ spectroscopic studies on vapor phase catalytic decomposition of dimethyl oxalate

Shweta Hegde, Kalsang Tharpa, Satyanarayana Reddy Akuri, Rakesh K., Ajay Kumar, Raj Deshpande, Sreejit A. Nair

2017-02-23 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C6CP07769B

Wet chemical etching induced stress relaxed nanostructures on polar & non-polar epitaxial GaN films

Abhiram Gundimeda, Bhasker Gahtori, Nita Dilawar, Ved Varun Aggarwal, Manju Singh, Rajib Rakshit

2017-03-07 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C7CP00380C

Time-resolved terahertz spectroscopy reveals the influence of charged sensitizing quantum dots on the electron dynamics in ZnO

Hynek Němec, Karel Žídek, Mohammed J. Al-Marri, Pavel Chábera, Carlito Ponseca, Tönu Pullerits

2017-02-09 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C6CP07509F

In search of the best DFT functional for dealing with organic anionic species

José L. Borioni, Marcelo Puiatti, D. Mariano A. Vera, Adriana B. Pierini

2017-03-03 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C6CP06163J

A battery cell for in situ NMR measurements of liquid electrolytes

Simon Wiemers-Meyer, Sascha Nowak

2017-01-26 Communication

DOI: 10.1039/C6CP08653E

You might also like

Compound Q&A

What are the main uses of 1H-Indazole-6-carbonitrile (CAS: 141290-59-7)?

1H-Indazole-6-carbonitrile finds applications in pharmaceuticals, where it serve...

141290-59-71H-Indazole-6-carbon...
Compound Q&A

How should waste containing Dioctyl (2E)-2-butenedioate (CAS: 2997-85-5) be handled?

Waste containing Dioctyl (2E)-2-butenedioate (CAS: 2997-85-5) should be collecte...

2997-85-5Dioctyl (2E)-2-buten...
Compound Q&A

What industries use Sodium [(1,2-benzoxazol-3-ylmethyl)sulfonyl]azanide (CAS: 68291-98-5)?

Sodium [(1,2-benzoxazol-3-ylmethyl)sulfonyl]azanide is primarily used in pharmac...

68291-98-5Sodium [(1,2-benzoxa...
Compound Q&A

Are there alternatives to Dimethyl 4-(4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborolan-2-yl)-2,6-pyridinedicarboxylate (CAS: 741709-66-0) in synthesis?

Dimethyl 4-(4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborolan-2-yl)-2,6-pyridinedicarboxyla...

741709-66-0Dimethyl 4-(4,4,5,5-...
Compound Q&A

How should waste containing 2-Fluoro-6-hydrazinopyridine (CAS: 80714-39-2) be handled?

Waste containing 2-Fluoro-6-hydrazinopyridine (CAS: 80714-39-2) should be manage...

80714-39-22-Fluoro-6-hydrazino...
Compound Q&A

What is 6-Formyl-2-pyridinecarboxylic acid (CAS: 499214-11-8)?

6-Formyl-2-pyridinecarboxylic acid is an organic compound with the molecular for...

499214-11-86-Formyl-2-pyridinec...
900874-91-13-(3,4-dimethoxyphen...
Compound Q&A

How is 9H-Tribenzo[b,d,f]azepine (CAS: 29875-73-8) typically synthesized?

9H-Tribenzo[b,d,f]azepine is typically synthesized via a multi-step process invo...

29875-73-89H-Tribenzo[b,d,f]az...
Compound Q&A

How is 1-Cyclopropyl-7-ethoxy-6-fluoro-8-methoxy-4-oxo-1,4-dihydro-3-quinolinecarboxylic acid (CAS: 1797982-51-4) typically synthesized?

1-Cyclopropyl-7-ethoxy-6-fluoro-8-methoxy-4-oxo-1,4-dihydro-3-quinolinecarboxyli...

1797982-51-41-Cyclopropyl-7-etho...
Compound Q&A

How should waste containing Methyl 3-oxo-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-quinoxalinecarboxylate (CAS: 671820-52-3) be handled?

Waste containing Methyl 3-oxo-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-quinoxalinecarboxylate (CAS: ...

671820-52-3Methyl 3-oxo-1,2,3,4...

Source Journal

Analyst

Analyst
CiteScore: 7.8
Self-citation Rate: 5.6%
Articles per Year: 653

Analyst publishes analytical and bioanalytical research that reports premier fundamental discoveries and inventions, and the applications of those discoveries, unconfined by traditional discipline barriers.

Recommended Compounds

Recommended Suppliers

Disclaimer
This page provides academic journal information for reference and research purposes only. We are not affiliated with any journal publishers and do not handle publication submissions. For publication-related inquiries, please contact the respective journal publishers directly.
If you notice any inaccuracies in the information displayed, please contact us at support@chemtradehub.com. We will promptly review and address your concerns.