Diagnostic Methods Flashcards

1
Q

What are some problems with culture-based methods?

A

Labour intensive
Error prone (fails to discriminate between closely related species)
Insensitive (common swamp rare bacteria)
Some resist in-vitro culture

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2
Q

What is specific PCR?

A

Primers designed to bind to gene or sequence that is specific to particular genus/species

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3
Q

What is broad-range PCR?

A

Primers selected from conserved regions shared by a given taxonomic group

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4
Q

Is traditional PCR quicker than culture?

A

Yes

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5
Q

What are possible solutions to contamination?

A

Physically separate lab areas
Lab coats,
Aerosol-resistant pipette tips

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6
Q

When are some contamination risks?

A

During sample prep
During reaction set up
When products are loaded onto gel for analysis

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7
Q

What gel does traditional PCR use?

A

Agarose gel

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8
Q

Which strains of Helicobacter pylori are cagA positive?

A

4 and 6`

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9
Q

What is real time PCR?

A

Detection of dsDNA by either non-specific binding with fluorescent dyes to amplify product with melt-curve analysis or specific binding with fluorescent probes to amplify product

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10
Q

What is reverse transcription PCR?

A

RNA -> cDNA -> PCR product

DNAse digestion to remove host gDNA

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11
Q

What is threshold cycle Ct?

A

Cycle number at which fluorescence passes threshold value in qPCR

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12
Q

How does 16S rRNA work?

A

16S has conserved regions which the primers bind to and amplify then using bioinformatics (BLAST) to identify

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13
Q

What does BLAST stand for?

A

Basic local alignment search tool

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14
Q

What is BLAST?

A

finds regions of similarity comparing nucleotide/protein sequences calculating an E value of the matches

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15
Q

What is multi-locus sequencing typing?

A

PCR of 7 or more loci comparing it to a database to identify allele type identifying cultures of related genotypes

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16
Q

What is whole genome sequencing?

A

Looks at the whole genome and compares to a database to identify

17
Q

What are the uses of WGS?

A

Diagnostics
Surveillance
Forensic epidemiology

18
Q

What is nanopore sequencing?

A

Passes intact DNA strands through protein nanopore, reading sequences in real time as DNA passes through the protein pore

19
Q

What are single nucleotide polymorphisms?

A

DNA sequence variations that occur when a single nucleotide in genome sequence mutates

20
Q

What is mass spectrometry?

A

Analytical technique that measures mass of proteins by ionization and measurement of mass-to-charge ratio

21
Q

What is MALDI-TOF?

A

Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight
Matrix absorbs UV light and coverts to heat energy charging ions of various sizes attracted to ion detector which is measured

22
Q

What are the limitations of MS for diagnostics?

A

Needs a colony/culture
Only identify species in database
Does not inform on AR
Not used for viruses