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Sampling Criteria • Sampling plans will depend on the question that they are designed to answer • Basic criteria – Replication – Representative – Random – Controls – Method Validation Detection of Pathogens in the Environment Detection of Pathogenic Microbes in Environmental Media • • • • Three main steps: (1) recovery, extraction and concentration, (2) purification and separation, and (3) assay and characterization. Assay Methods for Pathogens • • • • • culture or infectivity viability or activity measurements immunoassays nucleic acid assays Protein or other macromolecular/biochemical assays • microscopic examinations Microscopic Methods History of Microscopy • 1595 First Microscopes (tube with lens at each end; 3X to 9X magnification) – Hans and Zacharias Janssen, Dutch eyeglass makers • Improvement on Compound Microcope design and Publication of Micrographia – Robert Hooke; 1665; coined term “cell” • First description of Bacteria (tooth scrapings) and Protozoa (pond water) – Anton van Leeuwenhoek Detecting Pathogens and Indicators in the Environment Microscopy • Goal of microscopy is to improve resolving power – Resolving power is ability to distinguish two points as separate – Function of light and aperture of objective • Resolution=smallest visible distance between two points – Human eye can resolve about 150μm between two points – Most light Microscopes can resolve ~0.2 μm Magnification • The ability to enlarge the apparent size of an image – Function of resolving power of microscope and the eye • Limit of resolution of eye/limit of resolution of microscope = magnification – e.g. 0.15mm/0.0002mm = 750X Microscopic and Imaging Detection of Pathogens • Still widely used for parasites and bacteria • Specific staining and advanced imaging to distinguish target from non-target organisms – Differential interference contrast microscopy – Confocal laser microscopy • Distinguish infectious from non-infectious organisms – Combine with infectivity, viability or activity assays • Overcome sample size limitation due to presence of nontarget particles – Flow cytometry and other advanced imaging techniques – Advanced imaging methods require expensive hardware Types of Microscopes • Light microscopes – Compound – Dissection/stereo – Inverted – Confocal • Electron Microscopes – Scanning – Transmission Types of Microscopes • Light microscopes – Compound – Dissection/stereo – Inverted – Confocal • Electron Microscopes – Scanning – Transmission Types of Microscopes • Light microscopes – Compound – Dissection/stereo – Inverted – Confocal • Electron Microscopes – Scanning – Transmission Types of Microscopes • Light microscopes – Compound – Dissection/stereo – Inverted – Confocal • Electron Microscopes – Scanning – Transmission Types of Microscopes • Light microscopes – Compound – Dissection/stereo – Inverted – Confocal • Electron Microscopes – Scanning – Transmission Types of Microscopes • Light microscopes – Compound – Dissection/stereo – Inverted – Confocal • Electron Microscopes – Scanning – Transmission Light Microscopy • • • • • • Bright Field Dark Field Phase Contrast Differential Interference Contrast Epifluorescence Confocal Scanning Kohler Alignment Bright field • Most common of all light scopes • Light is transmitted through specimen • Specimen appears darker than surrounding field • Typical use: Gram Stains Gram Stain Microscopic Detection of Pathogens: Still Widely Used in Clinical Diagnostic Microbiology C. parvum oocysts ~5 um diam. Acid fast stain of fecal preparation Dark Field • Used to increase the contrast of a transparent specimen – Contrast = ability to distinguish an object from surrounding medium • Specimen appears as a bright image against dark background • Often used to observe live nonfixed/stained samples, e.g. observe motility and growth Darkfield Microscopy Phase Contrast • Used to observe fine internal detail • Takes advantage of differences in density of transparent internal cell components • Uses a series of diaphragms to separate and recombine direct versus diffracted light rays DIC • Illuminating light beam is split such that one beam passes through the specimen creating a phase difference with the second reference beam • Beams are then combined so that they interfere with eachother • Allows detection of small changes in in depth or elevation of the surface of the specimen – Thus gives 3d appearance Cryptosporidium parvum Differential Interference Contrast Microscopy Image courtesy of O.D. “Chip” Simmons, III Fluorescent • Uses UV light source to illuminate fluorescent dyes that then emit visible light – e.g. FITC, Acridine Orange, Rhodamine • Specimens appear as bright colored objects in front of black background • Often used with immunologic procedures Cryptosporidium parvum: Microscopic Analysis of NC field isolate Immunofluorescence Differential Interference Contrast DAPI stain Images courtesy of O.D. “Chip” Simmons, III Electron Microscopy • SEM-Scanning Electron Microscopy – Image is formed as electron probe scans the surface of the specimen – Produces 3d images • TEM-Transmission Electron Microscopy – Image formed as electrons pass through specimen – Specimens must be thin cut – Used to view internal structure Activity Assays/Vital Dyes Detection of Pathogens by Viability or Activity Assays Assay bacteria for viability or activity by combining microscopic examination with chemical treatments to detect activity or "viability". – measure enzymatic activities, such as dehydrogenase, esterase, protease, lipase, amylase, etc. • Example: tetrazolium dye (INT) reduction: 2-[p-iodophenyl]-3-[p-nitrophenyl]-5-phenyltetrazolium Cl (measures dehydrogenase activity). • Reduction of tetrazolium dye leads to precipitation of reduced products in the bacterial cells that are seen microscopically as dark crystals. FISH: DAPI-stained Bacteria Incubated with INT (Tetrazolium Salt) Enhanced image with artificial colors. •Blue: DAPI stain •Red: INT grains; indicate respiratory active bacteria. Progress in Detection of Bacteria by Viability or Activity Assays • Combine activity measurement and immunochemical assay (for specific bacteria). – Combine fluorescent antibody (FA) (for detection of specific bacterium or group) with enzymatic or other activity measurement • Use image analysis tools to improve detection and quantitation – Flow cytometry – Computer-aided laser scanning of cells or colonies on filters Viability or Activity Assays for Protozoan Cysts and Oocysts • Example: Stain with DAPI (the fluorogenic stain 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole; taken up by live oocysts and propidium iodide (PI; taken up by dead oocysts). – Viable Cryptosporidium oocysts are DAPI-positive and PInegative – Non-viable oocysts are DAPI-negative and PI-positive • Alternative stains may be more reliable • Viability staining is often poorly associated with infectivity Detects cysts and oocysts inactivated by UV and chemical disinfection C. parvum oocysts Dual stain : DAPI (blue) and propidium iodide (red) Immunological Methods Immunoglbulins • 5 Classes – IgA secretory – IgD found in plasma but not serum – IgE involved in allergic reactions – IgG humeral response – IgM humeral response • IgG and IgM most commonly used in immunoassays