Abstract
Bacterial sensing is important for understanding the numerous roles bacteria play in nature and in technology, understanding and managing bacterial populations, detecting pathogenic bacterial infections, and preventing the outbreak of illness. Current analytical challenges in bacterial sensing center on the dilemma of rapidly acquiring quantitative information about bacteria with high detection efficiency, sensitivity, and specificity, while operating within a reasonable budget and optimizing the use of ancillary tools, such as multivariate statistics. This review starts from a general description of bacterial sensing methods and challenges, and then focuses on bacterial characterization using optical methods including Raman spectroscopy and imaging, infrared spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy and imaging, and plasmonics, including both extended and localized surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. The advantages and drawbacks of each method in relation to the others are discussed, as are their applications. A particularly promising direction in bacterial sensing lies in combining multiple approaches to achieve multiplex analysis, and examples where this has been achieved are highlighted.
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Rationale for Bacteria Sensing
Bacteria are the progenitor organisms from which all complex life ensues. They have a huge impact on natural systems—agriculture, the environment and ecosystems—as well as health and wellness of humans and livestock. Most bacteria are benign, or even essential, in converting basic components to required substances for life. For example, Azotobacter and Rhizobium convert inert atmospheric N2 gas to ammonia, and subsequently to other organic nitro-compounds, which function broadly as nutrients for plants [1]. Similarly, Cyanobacteria direct nitrogen fixation for marine life [2]. As part of the human microbiome, bacteria in our gut not only extract nutrients for us by breaking down our food, but also are critical in maintaining the robustness of our immune system [3]. Thus, the detection of these bacteria plays a central role in maintaining their populations, understanding their roles, and ensuring the health of ecosystems.
Not all bacterial life is beneficial, however. Many bacteria are, or can become, pathogenic to humans as well as animals, and can cause a variety of diseases or even death. At a coarse level of classification, pathogenic bacteria can be foodborne, airborne, and bloodborne. Currently, multidrug resistant (MDR) pathogens are garnering the most interest, because the wide spread of antimicrobial resistance exponentially increases the difficulty of developing effective treatments. According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC), in the United States alone more than 2 million people are infected with antibiotic resistant bacteria each year, leading to ~23,000 direct deaths [4]. MDR bacteria are not only a domestic issue. The World Health Organization reports worldwide MDR in common bacterial infections and the failure of treatments of last resort in several countries [5]. Because the indiscriminate use of broad-spectrum antibiotics plays a crucial role in the development of MDR pathogens, new diagnostic tools, capable of selective and sensitive identification of bacteria, are critical for the development of targeted antimicrobials.
While bacterial sensing techniques are needed across a wide spectrum of technologies, the principal targets are: (1) the food industry to ensure food quality and prevent the outbreak of food-borne illnesses [6,7,8,9,10]; (2) clinical settings to identify the source of, and thus prevent, nosocomial infections; and (3) national security applications to detect biological weapons and prevent bioterrorism. Across the spectrum of food, clinical and bioterrorism applications new bacterial sensing platforms are needed which allow us to accurately and rapidly detect pathogenic bacteria at pre-infectious levels.
Analytical Challenges
The current challenge in the field of bacterial sensing centers on the dilemma of rapidly acquiring quantitative information about bacteria with high detection efficiency, sensitivity, and specificity, while operating within a reasonable budget and making optimal use of ancillary tools, such as multivariate statistics. From an analytical standpoint, obtaining accurate and sensitive readouts is a function of both signal amplification and background reduction, which in turn depends on the approach used to identify and quantitate bacteria. An ideal biosensor would be fast, accurate, sensitive, selective, cost effective, portable, robust, need minimum sample preparation and post-measurement data processing, as well as have a large dynamic range. Additionally, it would be accessible to operation by non-specialized personnel and suitable for point-of-care and field operation.
Currently, microbiological culturing methods are the gold standard in bacterial detection due to their extraordinary sensitivity and specificity. These methods have the capacity to detect a single bacterial cell in a sample; however, they are not rapid—often taking up to several days to identify bacteria—which may delay the start of targeted therapy. To solve this issue, a large variety of biosensors have been developed in the past twenty years. The interest in the field of biosensor and bacterial detection has blossomed and is still growing (Fig. 1). Broadly stated, the bacterial biosensor development seeks to simultaneously optimize all of the figures-of-merit mentioned above. However, this is quite challenging. Some biosensors are fast, requiring limited sample processing, but they suffer from relatively low sensitivity. Some biosensors have high sensitivity, but they are slow due to the requirement for cumbersome sample preparation protocols. Some biosensors have both fast readout and high sensitivity, but require expensive instrumentation and require technically skilled operators. The goal of achieving mutual optimization of all figures-of-merit in a single measurement platform has yet to be achieved.
Aside from bacterial identification, it is also challenging to obtain quantitative information. Sometimes a simple yes or no answer, obtainable from a threshold test, is just not enough, and information about the quantity of bacteria is critical. For example, quantitative information would have a great impact in diagnosing the onset of sepsis based upon clinically relevant cutoff points [11]. Unfortunately, in contrast to molecular sensors, bacterial biosensor signals do not always correlate with bacterial populations.
Additionally, it is challenging to achieve selectivity and specificity in bacterial sensing. There is a tremendous value in accurately revealing identities of bacteria down to strain level within a complex matrix. Rapidly identifying methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) from methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA) in a clinically relevant timeline (less than 3 h) would save precious treatment time and could potentially save lives. Unfortunately, biosensors with the required detection speed, selectivity and specificity are not yet widely available.
Another current issue is the proper integration of statistical analysis methods to enhance the selectivity and specificity of sensing modalities. Sophisticated multivariate statistical methods such as principal component analysis (PCA), hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), discriminant function analysis (DFA), partial least-squares (PLS), kernel PLS (KPLS), and canonical correlation analysis (CCA) can be used to determine small differences among samples, which would be extraordinarily difficult to identify from the sample spectra or biosensor response alone [12,13,14,15]. Multivariate statistical analysis methods can be key to averting false positive and false negative results. Consequently, sensing techniques which can optimize figures-of-merit and make optimal use of statistical methods are highly desired.
General Bacterial Sensing Methods
Bacterial sensing methods can be classified according to type of analytes, recognition elements, and detection methods. Depending on the situation, the target of the analysis could be bacterial metabolites or small molecules [16,17,18], bacterial lysates, e.g., proteins [19, 20] and nucleic acids [21, 22], bacterial spores [23, 24], whole bacteria [13, 25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32], and even biofilms [33, 34]. Selectivity is most frequently achieved through use of recognition elements, such as antibodies, enzymes and affinity reagents. Due to their inherent simplicity, affinity reagents, including antibodies [27, 31, 35,36,37], aptamers [30, 38,39,40,41,42], siderophores [29, 43], bacteriophages [32, 44, 45], antimicrobials [46, 47], and lectins [48], are commonly used. Among recognition agents, antibody–antigen recognition is most frequently used because of its high affinity (attractive K d values) and specificity. However, commercial antibody production suffers from batch to batch variation, temperature and pH instabilities, buffer incompatibility, cost, concerns over killing animals to harvest the antibodies, and potential loss of affinity to specific bacteria due to mutations of bacterial receptors.
To circumvent the technical challenges of antibody–antigen recognition, “immutable ligands” such as aptamers and siderophores have been developed. Aptamers, single strand oligonucleotides, can be specifically selected against bacteria with high affinity through systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) [49]. Once recognition-competent aptamer sequences are determined, aptamers can be easily synthesized in large quantity at relatively low cost and are stable under a wide range of conditions. However, it is tedious to select bacterial specific aptamer via SELEX, and it is still possible for the aptamer to lose its affinity to the target bacteria over time. In this context, siderophores, a group of small molecules released by bacteria to acquire nutrients, e.g., Fe(III), from the environment, are of particular interest, because they exhibit enormous binding affinities for their targets. Since siderophores are part of the bacterial nutrient uptake system, inactivating mutations, which would cause loss of affinity, are less likely [29]. Taking advantage of their high affinity, immutability, and stability, siderophores are promising new affinity agents in bacterial sensing. Finally, another alternative is offered through bacteriophages, which are the primary regulators of bacteria growth and prevalence. Aside from being cost effective, bacteriophages are highly selective and specific for live cells [50].
Detection of bacteria may be transduced by a variety of mechanisms, including electrochemical, mechanical, and optical. Within each category, preferences are based on the specific bacterial identification/measurement task. Due to complexity of the topic, it is not possible to cover all electrochemical and mechanical biosensors, but the interested reader is referred to excellent reviews [51, 52]. This review will focus on bacterial detection using optical methods—an area that has seen an explosion of recent activity.
Vibrational Spectroscopy
A great deal of effort has been invested in bacterial detection with vibrational spectroscopies, such as conventional Raman spectroscopy, which has the advantages of being label-free, non-invasive and which presents vibrational “fingerprints” of analytes that are uniquely determined by chemical composition and structure. The major drawback of conventional Raman spectroscopy is that the Raman scattering is inherently weak [53], for example as a rough guide, ca. 1 in 108 incident photons is inelastically scattered [54]. Also, the sample matrix can interfere with the acquisition of Raman signal by producing an overwhelming fluorescence background. To address these issues, a variety of Raman techniques have been developed in the past twenty years. These derivative approaches include surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS), coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopy (CARS), resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy, and Raman imaging, all of which are designed to enhance the signal relative to the background, thereby improving the signal-to-noise ratio in general, thus facilitating bacterial detection.
Recent instrumental advances in fast data acquisition and processing have greatly extended the capabilities of Raman scattering, enabling the collection of thousands of spectra within moderate acquisition times (~1 h). However, the information content of Raman spectra and images alone is often insufficient to differentiate among bacterial populations. To fully exploit the spectral information, to the point that minor differences from acquired Raman spectra or images can be used to assign bacterial species with confidence, sophisticated statistical analyses are usually required. With the help of these chemometric tools, Raman spectroscopy and its derivatives have the capacity to be both selective and specific, as evidenced by the fact that bacteria have been differentiated at the strain level from pure culture [14, 55], tap water samples [29], and clinical samples [13, 25, 54] using Raman techniques.
Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS)
SERS enhancement was first reported by Van Duyne and coworkers in 1977, in the form of a ~106 increase in the Raman signal compared to the expected value [56]. Since then, various methods to enhance Raman scattering have been developed. Raman signal enhancement is facilitated by SERS substrates, such as aggregated Ag or Au nanoparticles, or SERS tags [57] to reach a maximum SERS enhancement of 1010–1011 [58, 59]. In the SERS experiment, biomolecules with low abundance can be detected at relatively low laser power. In contemporary practice, the principal challenge is reproducibility arising from variations in SERS substrate properties and uncontrolled aggregation of metallic nanoparticles.
SERS has been widely applied to detect a large number of different types of bacterial samples, both in solution [60, 61] and on surfaces [17, 25, 57], viz. Fig. 2A. The most striking characteristic of SERS in the context of bacterial biosensing is its versatility. For example, Bacillus spores have been detected using dipicolinic acid as the biomarker on a SERS substrate [17] as well as in solution [62], with both studies generating a limit of detection (LOD) of ~103 spores. Furthermore, SERS detection schemes can be quite simple. For example, just mixing bacterial samples with Au or Ag nanoparticles prior to detection can lead to LODs of 103 CFU mL−1 [61], although the signal has to be carefully calibrated with respect to nanoparticle concentration. The specificity and selectivity of SERS can be improved by conjugating metal nanoparticles with affinity agents. For example, with two sets of antibodies, SERS has been utilized to detect bacteria with LODs as low as 5 or 8 CFU mL−1 [63, 64]. Moreover, SERS assays have been shown to be robust and capable of analyzing environmental water samples [63, 64].
Additionally, SERS has great possibilities with regard to achieving multiplex detection. For example, SERS has been coupled with electrokinetic transport for rapid human blood pathogen identification with an LOD of 103 CFU mL−1 [25]. With a nanostructured SERS substrate, e.g., quasi-3D gold, Gram-positive bacteria can be selectively identified in the presence of three different species of Gram-negative bacteria. In the same study, these three different species of Gram-negative bacteria were differentiated from each other with the help of principle component analysis (PCA) [15]. More recently seven different strains of Vibrio parahaemolyticus were differentiated with a LOD of 105 CFU mL−1 [14]. Moreover, SERS has been coupled with microfluidics and confocal microscopy to rapidly differentiate between methicillin-resistant S. aureus and methicillin-sensitive S. aureus from clinical isolates [13]. Despite the challenges of associating relatively large bacterial cells with nanoscopic SERS-enhancing hot spots, SERS is already well entrenched as an established bacterial detection and identification approach.
Tip-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (TERS)
TERS was proposed in 1980s to optimize the use of hot spots and allow acquisition of Raman spectra from smooth or single crystal surfaces [58]. In 2000 Zenobi and coworkers reported the first TERS experiment [65]. TERS utilizes a scanning probe with a tip (<50 nm in diameter) that plays a vital role in mediating the TERS enhancement by creating hot spots to enhance the near-field plasmon which further enhances Raman scattering of molecules in the junction, viz. Fig. 2B [65, 66]. TERS exhibits an approximate 106 enhancement factor, which, given the small areas addressed, enables single molecule detection [58]. In addition, TERS collects chemical information and also provides topographic information at nanometer spatial resolution [66].
However, given that it has been developed relatively recently, there are only limited applications of TERS to bacterial sensing. The first example of bacterial biosensing with TERS was reported by Neugebauer et al. [67], who simultaneously obtained topographic AFM images and TERS spectra of a single Staphylococcus epidermis bacterium with an estimated enhancement factor of 104–105. One drawback of TERS is that it produces spectra in which the intensity and position of some Raman bands vary depending on location on the bacterial surface, a feature that is exacerbated by the heterogeneity of the bacterial cell surface at the nanoscale [68]. Nevertheless, with its superior spatial resolutions and excellent mass sensitivity, TERS has great potential to contribute to understanding bacterial surface composition, distribution of surface components, mechanism of bacterial cell adhesion to surfaces, and biofilm formation, thus adding great values to the suite of Raman-based approaches to bacterial sensing.
Coherent Anti-stokes Raman Spectroscopy (CARS)
CARS is an intriguing addition to the collection of vibrational spectroscopies for bacterial assays, because it is relatively insensitive to fluorescence interference due to the scattered photons appearing at a higher frequency than the incident photons. CARS has been applied to identify Bacillus subtilis endospores in a single laser shot with an approximately LOD of 104 spores [24]. Despite its fast detection capabilities, the LOD of CARS is limited. To achieve single bacterium detection, CARS can be combined with microscopy. CARS imaging has the potential to collect Raman images of biological samples in real time, and has been applied to visualize carotenoid chemical fingerprints from cyanobacteria [69]. This label-free technique permits non-invasive mapping of carotenoid distributions at the subcellular level with high spatial resolution.
Hyperspectral imaging can further extend these powerful vibrational spectroscopies. For example, a hyperspectral Raman imaging instrument can record a stack of images in which each pixel in the image contains a full Raman (or SERS, TERS, CARS) spectrum. Specifically, hyperspectral CARS imaging has been utilized to identify anthrax spores in postal materials, which has obvious impact in combating threats from bioterrorism, viz. Fig. 2D [23]. Recently, a fiber laser-based hyperspectral CARS imaging approach was used to detect single live Escherichia coli cells in situ within 2 min [12]; the approach combining phase retrieval and multivariate curve resolution to detect and identify single E. coli cells in milk and urine samples with minimal sample preparation. CARS microscopy has great potential for clinical detection due to its inherent advantages as well as the portability and cost effectiveness of the instrument.
Resonance Raman (RR) Spectroscopy
Resonance Raman spectroscopy utilizes excitation wavelengths in resonance with electronic states, typically in the ultraviolet region, to excite Raman scattering. RR features nearly complete elimination of fluorescence background at excitation wavelengths below 260 nm [70], as well as selective excitation of scattering from aromatic amino acids, i.e., tyrosine, tryptophan, phenylalanine, and nucleic acids in bacterial cell metabolites and whole cell bacteria, viz. Fig. 2C [71]. Compared to conventional Raman spectroscopy, the enhancement factor of RR spectroscopy can be as high as 106 [72]. However, biological samples may suffer photo-degradation as a result of exposure to high energy UV photons. Furthermore, RR spectroscopy cannot identify or differentiate bacterial species and strains on its own. Typically, multivariate statistical methods have to be applied to tease out bacterial identification information. For example, RR spectroscopy has been used to analyze 20 clinical bacterial isolates (whole cell) from urinary tract infection patients and differentiate four bacterial species with the help of chemometric cluster analysis [73]. In combination with various chemometric methods, RR spectroscopy has also been used to classify different strains of lactic acid bacteria from yogurt [70].
Raman Microspectroscopy and Raman Imaging
Another challenge in using Raman signals to identify bacteria originates from the heterogeneity of bacterial samples on a microscopic, i.e., µm, lengthscale [53]. To solve this problem, confocal Raman microscopy (CRM), a hyperspectral imaging approach combining Raman spectroscopy and microscopy, can be applied to complex bacterial samples, such as bacterial communities, producing information about bacterial morphology, quantity, spatial distribution, and the detailed mechanisms of chemical communication bacteria use to organize multicellular communities.
Instead of recording a single image or discrete images, CRM acquires hyperspectral Raman scattering in either point or line mapping mode. In the mapping mode, Raman microspectra are collected utilizing a tightly focused excitation laser (<1 µm diam.), providing spatial resolution [74] that is commensurate to the size of typical bacteria (1–2 µm, typ.), thus allowing individual planktonic bacteria to be distinguished and even probed individually [34]. These characteristics have been exploited to detect bacterial meningitis and discriminate various bacterial species with the assistance of hierarchical cluster analysis [28]. In addition to studies that seek to identify a single bacterial species (or strain), CRM has been used to study the interactions between bacteria and other species. For example, the bacterium Pantoea sp. YR343, an important component of the rhizosphere, was imaged by CRM and correlated with electron microscope images in co-culture with Arabidopsis thaliana [75].
Raman microscopy is also well suited to being combined with other techniques, such as mass spectrometry (e.g., secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS)), to acquire multiplex information that is simultaneously multi-modal and hyperspectral, i.e., each pixel represents two different complete spectra—e.g., a Raman spectrum and a SIMS mass spectrum. This leads to an incredibly rich array of possible spectral correlations that can be exploited in probing cooperative microbial behavior and biofilm formation. For example, intercellular communication is based on quorum sensing (QS), in which individual cells differentially produce an array of molecular messengers which, upon achieving a threshold concentration produces either up- or down-regulation of target genes [76, 77]. To illustrate the approach, CRM was combined with SIMS imaging to study how the spatial and temporal organization of quinolones and quinolines in Pseudomonas aeruginosa microbial communities correlate with the growth in free-floating planktonic cells, colonies on agar plates, and static biofilms, viz. Fig. 3 [33].
CRM can also be productively combined with other Raman strategies, such as SERS, to build in situ spatiotemporal maps of chemical messengers. For example, CRM-SERS was combined with PCA to obtain detailed spatial distributions of the virulence factor pyocyanin in communities of P. aeruginosa. CRM-SERS was able to circumvent interference from sample autofluorescence and to counter the inherent problems with reproducibility that attend some SERS experiments. The production of pyocyanin was found to depend both on the growth carbon source and on the specific strain of P. aeruginosa studied [78].
Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy
As a complement to Raman spectroscopy, IR spectroscopy also has the capacity to identify bacteria based on patterns of molecular vibrations. Although Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) has several advantages, including rapid spectral acquisition, sensitivity that can be improved by averaging spectra over multiple scans, and non-invasive detection, it has the major drawback that water gives rise to strong background absorption. Thus, biological samples, including those containing bacteria need to be dried prior to IR measurements. Nevertheless, IR spectroscopy has been productively used in surface and material characterization, bacterial spore detection, and dried biological sample analysis. For example, with the assistance of multivariate statistical analysis FT-IR spectroscopy was used to enumerate S. aureus and Lactococcus cremoris in milk within a few minutes, viz. Fig. 4 [79]. FT-IR was also used to identify six of the most clinically relevant Gram-negative non-fermenting bacilli isolates from cystic fibrosis (CF) patients’ sputum samples as well as to discriminate four of the common Burkholderia cepacia complex bacteria among CF patients [80].
Fluorescence Spectroscopy
Despite the ubiquitous nature of biological fluorescence (autofluorescence), a number of approaches have been developed for bacterial assays based on characteristic luminescence properties of bacteria. Endogenous fluorescence typically arises from: (1) biological structures, e.g., the extracellular matrix, (2) small biological molecules or metabolites including nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) [81], flavins [82], and quinolones [83], or (3) proteins containing aromatic amino acids [84], and natively fluorescent proteins, e.g., green fluorescence protein (GFP) [85, 86] and the related family of inherently fluorescent proteins, e.g. YFP [85, 87], mCherry [88,89,90], etc. GFP not only has high quantum yield ranging from 0.72 to 0.85 [86], but the GFP gene can be inserted into various biological samples via transgenic techniques to produce GFP either alone or as chimeric fusion proteins. With the exception of GFP, the expression of which can be controlled at the genetic level, endogenous fluorescence is typically only useful for non-specific detection. For aforementioned reasons, GFP is the only endogenous fluorescence which has been widely used for targeted bioimaging.
Exogenous fluorescence involves chemically tagging appropriate sites with synthetic fluorophores. These fluorophores can be organic dyes, quantum dots, or upconversion nanoparticles. Synthetic fluorophores have been engineered to have tunable excitation and emission, high quantum efficiency, good photostability, and excellent specificity when conjugated to a recognition element. With recent advances in the engineering of fluorophores, a wide range of biomolecular phenomena can be studied with all of the inherent advantages of fluorescence, especially the sensitivity and background discrimination that make it possible to visualize spatial structure [91] and to detect single molecules and/or bacteria [26, 47, 92,93,94,95,96,97].
Counterbalancing these powerful advantages, there are some caveats to the effective use of fluorescence for bacterial biosensing. Users have to be cautious to avoid photobleaching by choosing proper excitation power or in some cases by the use of additives that suppress photo-oxidation. Quantum dots are robust and can be used to counter this issue [32, 98, 99]. Moreover, to achieve specific detection, fluorophores are usually modified with a recognition agent, e.g. antibodies [100,101,102] and aptamers [40]. However, conjugation with fluorophores can in some cases interfere with protein function, causing the antibody to lose affinity. Nevertheless with proper attention to experimental design, fluorescence is a powerful and widely utilized method of bacterial sensing.
Fluorescence spectroscopy has been applied to selectively detect Listeria monocytogenes in pure culture as well as artificially contaminated food with a LOD of 103 CFU mL−1 using an antibody as capture molecule and a fluorophore-conjugated aptamer as reporter molecule [100]. Fluorescence obviously also offers the possibility of spectral multiplexing. Employing two different antibodies, three pathogens were simultaneously detected from artificially contaminated food with a LOD of 103 CFU mL−1 [101]. More recently, a droplet based fluorescence immunoassay was developed to selectively detect E. coli and Salmonella typhimurium in a mixture with a LOD of 102 CFU mL−1 for both bacteria [102]. Furthermore, the detection was accomplished in ~12 min, and could be carried out using smartphones with proper filters. In some cases, sample preparation can be time-consuming. To shorten sample preparation and minimize the use of statistical analysis, Mouffouk et al. [26] used pH-sensitive nanopolymeric micelles containing fluorescent dyes to achieve a LOD of 15 E. coli mL−1, viz. Fig. 5A. These examples illustrate the principal advantage of fluorescence approaches, namely the excellent sensitivity that can be achieved with proper care in experimental design.
Fluorescence in vivo imaging, another powerful diagnostic tool, has great potential to detect bacterial infections, given that it can be highly species/strain-specific and non-invasive while providing real-time imaging at high resolution and at relatively low cost [92]. However, potential cytotoxicity of the imaged fluorophores remains a concern that needs further testing. Typical LOD values for fluorescence in vivo imaging are consistent with the clinical infection levels (~107 CFU mL−1). Various groups have reported using (1) fluorescently labeled vancomycin to selectively detect Gram-positive bacterial infections in a mouse myositis model, viz. Fig. 5B [92], (2) fluorescently labeled maltodextrin to detect metabolically active bacteria [93], (3) fluorescently labeled prothrombin to detect S. aureus induced endocarditis in mice [94], and (4) a fluorescently labeled β-lactam moiety with a fluorescence quencher to detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis in live mice [103]. Thus, the application of fluorescence in vivo imaging is a promising tool that is likely to grow in applications going forward.
Plasmonics
Nanometer-sized metallic objects exhibit extraordinary optical properties not observed in bulk materials. When an incident photon strikes a metal nanoparticle, the resulting collective oscillation of electrons, or plasmons, produces an extinction peak at a characteristic wavelength. The extraordinary optical properties of metal nanoparticles can be explained using Mie theory to express the extinction E(λ) in terms of the optical response functions of the media involved [104, 105],
where \( \lambda \) is the wavelength of the absorbing radiation, \( E\left( \lambda \right) \) is the extinction, \( N_{\text{A}} \) is the areal density of metallic nanoparticles, \( a \) is the radius of a spherical metal nanoparticle, \( \chi \) is the polarization factor corresponding to the aspect ratio of metal nanoparticle (\( \chi = \, 2 \) for a sphere), \( \varepsilon_{\text{m}} \) is the dielectric constant of the surrounding medium, and \( \varepsilon_{\text{i}} \) and \( \varepsilon_{\text{r}} \) are imaginary and real parts of the dielectric response function of the metal nanoparticle, respectively. According to Mie theory, plasmons arising in metal nanoparticles can be systematically tuned by changing the shape and material of the nanoparticles, excitation wavelength, and—most importantly for plasmon-based sensing—the dielectric constant of the surroundings.
Propagating surface plasmon resonances (SPR) are most frequently studied in planar thin metallic films. As predicted by Mie theory, the spectral position of the surface plasmon resonance can be tuned by changing the material and thickness of the metallic thin film as well as the refractive index of its local environment. In the context of SPR, the local environment can be understood as the volume over which the plasmon field decays in the dielectric medium [106]. An especially useful variant of SPR, localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) spectroscopy, utilizes surface confined plasmons from nanoparticles. The position of LSPR peaks are sensitive to material, size—both in-plane width and out-of-plane height—shape, e.g., sphere, triangle, rod, and interparticle spacing, as well as the refractive index of the surroundings [105].
Both SPR and LSPR spectroscopy are refractive index based sensing techniques, viz. Fig. 6A, B[6, 105, 107]. The refractive index of local surroundings can be altered by changing the solvent and by molecular adsorption. Because the magnitude of the wavelength shift upon molecular (or bacterial) adsorption can be correlated to analyte concentration and to the rate of association and dissociation of target molecules, plasmon sensing can be used to extract both analytical (concentration) as well as kinetic information. Both SPR and LSPR spectroscopy are rapid and label-free sensing techniques, but neither of them is inherently selective. The selectivity of both sensing platforms comes from surface confined biorecognition elements. Moreover, the sensitivity of both techniques is affected by the size, concentration, and surface confined binding constant (\( {\rm K}_{{{\text{a}},{\text{surf}}}} \)) of analytes, as well as the distance of the analyte to the sensor surface [104]. Typically, larger molecules, higher analyte concentrations, larger \( {\rm K}_{{{\text{a}},{\text{surf}}}} \) and shorter capture agents—which bind the analyte closer to the surface—give rise to larger plasmon shifts [104, 107].
The challenges of using both SPR and LSPR spectroscopy in bacterial sensing are several. The similarity of refractive index among target analytes, e.g., biomolecules, bacteria, and surface recognition motifs inherently limits sensitivity, even for efficient analyte capture. This limitation can be addressed by the addition of an amplification agent, such as gold nanoparticle-labeled DNA [108, 109]. The typical use of diffusion to drive mass transport to the surface limits the speed of analysis. This can be addressed by using active transport, for example using dielectrophoresis at interdigitated electrode arrays [110]. In common with all surface adsorption-based approaches the possibility of non-specific adsorption giving false positive signals is a pervasive issue that is commonly addressed by decorating the non-active parts of the surface with a non-specific adsorption-resistant coating, such as poly(ethylene glycol) [111]. Finally, a special challenge in the use of SPR and LSPR bacterial sensing arises from the relative magnitude of the sensing depth and the size of bacteria for probing whole bacteria [27].
Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) Spectroscopy
Despite the challenges facing the use of SPR, it has been widely utilized for bacterial detection. With anti-E. coli as an affinity reagent, SPR spectroscopy was able to detect E.coli in pure culture and from spinach leaves with LODs of 103 and 104 CFU mL−1, respectively [35, 36]. With immobilized T4 bacteriophage as a recognition element, flowing E. coli past a metal-decorated optical fiber produced a LOD of 103 CFU mL−1 [45]. Tawil et al. [44] reported detection of E. coli O157:H7 and methicillin-resistant S. aureus using surface immobilized T4 and BP14 bacteriophage, respectively, with a LOD of 103 CFU mL−1 in both cases, viz. Fig. 7.
Additionally, parallel bacterial sensing with multichannel SPR sensing has also been demonstrated. With this sensing platform, four food-borne bacterial pathogens were simultaneously detected using immobilized antibodies as affinity agent. Sensing was demonstrated in both buffer and apple juice with LODs ranging from 3.4 × 103 to 1.2 × 105 CFU mL−1 [6]. A SPR biosensor based on grating-coupled long range surface plasmons and coupled with antibody labeled magnetic nanoparticles was developed to detect E. coli O157:H7 with an extraordinary LOD of 50 CFU mL−1 [27].
Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance (LSPR) Spectroscopy
The LSPR characteristics of metal nanoparticles have been appreciated for several decades. However, initially the dispersion in size, and thus resonant wavelength, prevented their widespread use in biosensing. In 1995, Van Duyne and coworkers developed nanosphere lithography (NSL) [112], which can generate highly monodisperse metallic nanoparticle arrays on surfaces. The resulting metallic nanoparticle arrays exhibit strong and highly wavelength-specific LSPR peaks, and thus serve as nearly ideal LSPR substrates. Utilizing these NSL-derived substrates, Van Duyne and coworkers published the first demonstration of LSPR detection in 2000 [113] and have systematically investigated LSPR sensing since then. The introduction of NSL-fabricated arrays of monodisperse nanoparticles to LSPR sensing was a seminal advance, because it dramatically reduced the sample-to-sample variation, resulting in structures that are typically limited by surface defects and possible impurity adsorption on surface.
Biomolecular systems, such as biotin and streptavidin [114], biotin and anti-biotin [6, 37, 105, 107], as well as other antibody–antigen [27, 31, 35, 36], and aptamer-based recognition systems [41, 115, 116] have been extensively explored using LSPR. In addition, LSPR sensors can be reusable in immunoassays with relatively weak binding, e.g., biotin/anti-biotin, where the recognition surface can be regenerated by mild changes in solution conditions [37]. In general, LSPR sensors have been applied to detect biomolecular interactions, but to-date they have only rarely been applied for bacterial sensing. Fu et al. demonstrated the detection of whole cell Salmonella via anti-Salmonella antibody on surface confined Au nanoparticles. A plasmonic peak shift was observed when bacteria were bound to the surface, but there was no correlation in terms of bacterial concentration, viz. Fig. 8 [31]. Nevertheless, the prospects for LSPR bacterial biosensing are promising. The chief hurdles to overcome are the relative sizes of bacteria and LSPR motifs as well as the existence of many different capture targets on the surface of bacteria. Bacteria are many times larger than the typical NSL-derived nanoparticle elements, so in contrast to molecular sensing with LSPR, where many molecules are resident on a single nanoparticle, even relatively small bacteria are likely to span many nanoparticles. In addition, the vast majority of bacteria are non-spherical; so the point of attachment can determine the orientation of the bacterial cell on the nanoparticle thus affecting its dielectric response function in the near-particle volume. However, these problems are certainly no worse than the sensitivity and reproducibility issues already solved in molecular LSPR biosensing; so in the future we expect to see LSPR added to the armamentarium of optical biosensing strategies for bacteria.
Summary and Future Prospects
In this review, we addressed the importance of sensing bacteria and the challenges and successes associated with each of three broad classes of bacterial biosensors based on Raman scattering, fluorescence, and plasmonics. Each class exploits a fundamentally distinct feature of bacteria. Raman scattering takes advantage of characteristic vibrational signatures that are enhanced—either by way of molecular abundance or signal generation mechanisms—to the exclusion of other signals. In typical samples of planktonic bacteria, for example, the bacteria signals are dominated by nucleotide scattering, whereas adding SERS-enhancing nanoparticles accentuates cell membrane components. Fluorescence bacterial biosensing exploits the inherent sensitivity associated with the detection of an exogenous fluorescence label. As such, it is largely limited by background and by the specificity of the recognition motif used to convey the label to the bacteria. Recently SPR and LSPR approaches have grown in their use for bacterial sensing. Here the presence of the bacteria is signaled by the change in the dielectric response function of the medium in the near-field of plasmonic nanoparticles. Because bacteria are large compared to the sensing structures, they can, in principle, be detected quite sensitively.
Conventional Raman spectroscopy and its derivatives are powerful optical techniques in the field of bacterial sensing. Raman spectroscopy provides characteristic molecular fingerprints; is insensitive to water, which enables detection of biological samples in their native environment; and is non-invasive. However, conventional Raman spectroscopy is inherently weak; so various Raman derivatives have developed to address the sensitivity issue. SERS exhibits great versatility, good sensitivity, and specificity, and it is the most widely utilized Raman technique for bacterial detection. TERS not only records chemical information of analytes, but also topographic information with nanometer-scale spatial resolution, which is extremely useful in studying bacterial surface compositions, distribution of surface components, cellular structures, and even biofilm structure. Currently, TERS has only infrequently been used for bacterial sensing applications, but this should change as commercial TERS instruments become more readily available. CARS, especially recent broadband variants, combines rapid detection with moderate sensitivity. Essentially every type of Raman spectroscopy can be coupled with microscopy to achieve bacterial imaging, and the resulting hyperspectral data sets open up a rich set of analysis possibilities, including combinations with other imaging modalities, such as mass spectrometry imaging, to enable multiplex sensing and imaging. Furthermore, although the spectra of bacteria arise from a common set of organismal components, i.e., nucleotides, proteins, lipids, etc., judicious use of chemometrics and multivariate statistical approaches renders Raman techniques capable of differentiating bacterial species, even down to the strain level.
Fluorescence spectroscopy has also been extensively used for bacterial sensing because of its high sensitivity and the specificity imbued by fluorophore-conjugated affinity agents. Exogenous fluorescence, as it is used in bacterial biosensing, is ultimately limited by the background, however, under the right conditions single molecules and single bacteria can be detected. Furthermore, the use of the spectral dimension makes it possible to achieve spectral multiplexing and thereby simultaneously determine multiple bacterial targets. Recently the combination of bacterial recognition and fluorescence readout has been combined to achieve in vivo fluorescence imaging, wherein bacteria can be detected directly in living organisms and/or biopsy tissues, making it a promising diagnostic tool for the clinic.
The most recent addition to optical bacterial biosensing, SPR and LSPR detection, has been made possible by advances in nanotechnology. These sensing modalities which detect changes in the local dielectric response function are extraordinarily sensitive to the material, size, shape, thickness, and interparticle spacing of the sensor surface, as well as the refractive index of the surroundings. SPR and LSPR approaches are both sensitive to the size and concentration of analytes, and they have been employed extensively for chemical and biochemical sensing. In contrast bacterial sensing, to the extent that plasmonic approaches have been used, has far more frequently used SPR, although the characteristics of LSPR would seem to make it a promising approach for the future.
References
O’Hara GW. Nutritional constraints on root nodule bacteria affecting symbiotic nitrogen fixation: a review. Aust J Exp Agric. 2001;41:417–33.
Berman-Frank I, Lundgren P, Falkowski P. Nitrogen fixation and photosynthetic oxygen evolution in cyanobacteria. Res Microbiol. 2003;154(3):157–64.
About the HMP. NIH Human Microbiome Project Website. http://hmpdacc.org/overview/about.php. Accessed 15 Nov 2016.
Antibiotic/Antibicrobial Resistance. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Website. 2016. https://www.cdc.gov/drugresistance/. Accessed 15 Nov 2016.
Antimicrobial Resistance. World Health Organization Website. 2016. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs194/en/. Accessed 15 Nov 2016.
Taylor AD, Ladd J, Yu Q, Chen S, Homola J, Jiang S. Quantitative and simultaneous detection of four foodborne bacterial pathogens with a multi-channel SPR sensor. Biosens Bioelectron. 2006;22(5):752–8.
Gracias KS, McKillip JL. A review of conventional detection and enumeration methods for pathogenic bacteria in food. Can J Microbiol. 2004;50(11):883–90.
Swaminathan B, Feng P. Rapid detection of food-borne pathogenic bacteria. Annu Rev Microbiol. 1994;48:401–26.
Capita R, Alonso-Calleja C. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria: a challenge for the food industry. Crit Rev Food Sci. 2013;53(1):11–48.
Ellis DI, Brewster VL, Dunn WB, Allwood JW, Golovanov AP, Goodacre R. Fingerprinting food: current technologies for the detection of food adulteration and contamination. Chem Soc Rev. 2012;41(17):5706–27.
Bloos F, Reinhart K. Rapid diagnosis of sepsis. Virulence. 2014;5(1):154–60.
Hong W, Liao C-S, Zhao H, Younis W, Zhang Y, Seleem MN, et al. In situ detection of a single bacterium in complex environment by yyperspectral CARS imaging. ChemistrySelect. 2016;3:513–7.
Lu X, Samuelson DR, Xu Y, Zhang H, Wang S, Rasco BA, et al. Detecting and tracking nosocomial methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus using a microfluidic SERS biosensor. Anal Chem. 2013;85(4):2320–7.
Xu J, Turner JW, Idso M, Biryukov SV, Rognstad L, Gong H, et al. In situ strain-level detection and identification of Vibrio parahaemolyticus using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. Anal Chem. 2013;85(5):2630–7.
Xu J, Zhang L, Gong H, Homola J, Yu Q. Tailoring plasmonic nanostructures for optimal SERS sensing of small molecules and large microorganisms. Small. 2011;7:371–6.
Haes AJ, Chang L, Klein WL, Van Duyne RP. Detection of a biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease from synthetic and clinical samples using a nanoscale optical biosensor. J Am Chem Soc. 2005;127(7):2264–71.
Zhang X, Zhao J, Whitney AV, Elam JW, Van Duyne RP. Ultrastable substrates for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy: Al2O3 overlayers fabricated by atomic layer deposition yield improved anthrax biomarker detection. J Am Chem Soc. 2006;128:10304–9.
Hossain SMZ, Ozimok C, Sicard C, Aguirre SD, Ali MM, Li Y, et al. Multiplexed paper test strip for quantitative bacterial detection. Anal Bioanal Chem. 2012;403(6):1567–76.
Song H, Sandie R, Wang Y, Andrade-Navarro MA, Niederweis M. Identification of outer membrane proteins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Tuberculosis. 2008;88(6):526–44.
Rodriguez-Ortega MJ, Norais N, Bensi G, Liberatori S, Capo S, Mora M, et al. Characterization and identification of vaccine candidate proteins through analysis of the group A Streptococcus surface proteome. Nat Biotechnol. 2006;24(2):191–7.
Kang T, Yoo SM, Yoon I, Lee SY, Kim B. Patterned multiplex pathogen DNA detection by Au particle-on-wire SERS sensor. Nano Lett. 2010;10(4):1189–93.
Mohanty N, Berry V. Graphene-based single-bacterium resolution biodevice and DNA transistor: interfacing graphene derivatives with nanoscale and microscale biocomponents. Nano Lett. 2008;8(12):4469–76.
Arora R, Petrov GI, Yakovlev VV, Scully MO. Detecting anthrax in the mail by coherent Raman microspectroscopy. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2012;109(4):1151–3.
Pestov D, Wang X, Ariunbold GO, Murawski RK, Sautenkov VA, Dogariu A, et al. Single-shot detection of bacterial endospores via coherent Raman spectroscopy. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2008;105(2):422–7.
Cheng I-F, Chang H-C, Chen T-Y, Hu C, Yang F-L. Rapid (< 5 min) identification of pathogen in human blood by electrokinetic concentration and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. Sci Rep. 2013;3:2365.
Mouffouk F, da Costa AM, Martins J, Zourob M, Abu-Salah KM, Alrokayan SA. Development of a highly sensitive bacteria detection assay using fluorescent pH-responsive polymeric micelles. Biosens Bioelectron. 2011;26(8):3517–23.
Wang Y, Knoll W, Dostalek J. Bacterial pathogen surface plasmon resonance biosensor advanced by long range surface plasmons and magnetic nanoparticle assays. Anal Chem. 2012;84(19):8345–50.
Harz M, Kiehntopf M, Stockel S, Rosch P, Straube E, Deufel T, et al. Direct analysis of clinical relevant single bacterial cells from cerebrospinal fluid during bacterial meningitis by means of micro-Raman spectroscopy. J Biophoton. 2009;2(1–2):70–80.
Pahlow S, Stockel S, Pollok S, Cialla-May D, Rosch P, Weber K, et al. Rapid identification of Pseudomonas spp. via Raman spectroscopy using pyoverdine as capture probe. Anal Chem. 2016;88(3):1570–7.
Urmann K, Arshavsky-Graham S, Walter JG, Scheper T, Segal E. Whole-cell detection of live lactobacillus acidophilus on aptamer-decorated porous silicon biosensors. Analyst. 2016;141(18):5432–40.
Fu J, Park B, Zhao Y. Limitation of a localized surface plasmon resonance sensor for Salmonella detection. Sensor Actuat B Chem. 2009;141(1):276–83.
Edgar R, McKinstry M, Hwang J, Oppenheim AB, Fekete RA, Giulian G, et al. High-sensitivity bacterial detection using biotin-tagged phage and quantum-dot nanocomplexes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2006;103(13):4841–5.
Baig NF, Dunham SJ, Morales-Soto N, Shrout JD, Sweedler JV, Bohn PW. Multimodal chemical imaging of molecular messengers in emerging Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacterial communities. Analyst. 2015;140(19):6544–52.
Masyuko RN, Lanni EJ, Driscoll CM, Shrout JD, Sweedler JV, Bohn PW. Spatial organization of Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms probed by combined matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry and confocal Raman microscopy. Analyst. 2014;139(22):5700–8.
Baccar H, Mejri MB, Hafaiedh I, Ktari T, Aouni M, Abdelghani A. Surface plasmon resonance immunosensor for bacteria detection. Talanta. 2010;82(2):810–4.
Linman MJ, Sugerman K, Cheng Q. Detection of low levels of Escherichia coli in fresh spinach by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy with a TMB-based enzymatic signal enhancement method. Sensor Actuat B Chem. 2010;145(2):613–9.
Riboh JC, Haes AJ, McFarland AD, Yonzon CR, Van Duyne RP. A nanoscale optical biosensor: real-time immunoassay in physiological buffer enabled by improved nanoparticle adhesion. J Phys Chem B. 2003;107:1772–80.
Labib M, Zamay AS, Kolovskaya OS, Reshetneva IT, Zamay GS, Kibbee RJ, et al. Aptamer-based impedimetric sensor for bacterial typing. Anal Chem. 2012;84(19):8114–7.
Wang KY, Zeng YL, Yang XY, Li WB, Lan XP. Utility of aptamer-fluorescence in situ hybridization for rapid detection of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Eur J Clin Microbiol. 2011;30(2):273–8.
Chung J, Kang JS, Jurng JS, Jung JH, Kim BC. Fast and continuous microorganism detection using aptamer-conjugated fluorescent nanoparticles on an optofluidic platform. Biosens Bioelectron. 2015;67:303–8.
Xie L, Yan X, Du Y. An aptamer based wall-less LSPR array chip for label-free and high throughput detection of biomolecules. Biosens Bioelectron. 2014;53:58–64.
Chang Y-C, Yang C-Y, Sun R-L, Cheng Y-F, Kao W-C, Yang P-C. Rapid single cell detection of Staphylococcus aureus by aptamer-conjugated gold nanoparticles. Sci Rep. 2013;3:1863.
Doorneweerd DD, Henne WA, Reifenberger RG, Low PS. Selective capture and identification of pathogenic bacteria using an immobilized siderophore. Langmuir. 2010;26(19):15424–9.
Tawil N, Sacher E, Mandeville R, Meunier M. Surface plasmon resonance detection of E. coli and methicillin-resistant S. aureus using bacteriophages. Biosens Bioelectron. 2012;37(1):24–9.
Tripathi SM, Bock WJ, Mikulic P, Chinnappan R, Ng A, Tolba M, et al. Long period grating based biosensor for the detection of Escherichia coli bacteria. Biosens Bioelectron. 2012;35(1):308–12.
Mannoor MS, Zhang S, Link AJ, McAlpine MC. Electrical detection of pathogenic bacteria via immobilized antimicrobial peptides. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2010;107(45):19207–12.
Pages JM, Kascakova S, Maigre L, Allam A, Alimi M, Chevalier J, et al. New peptide-based antimicrobials for tackling drug resistance in bacteria: single-cell fluorescence imaging. ACS Med Chem Lett. 2013;4(6):556–9.
Adak AK, Leonov AP, Ding N, Thundimadathil J, Kularatne S, Low PS, et al. Bishydrazide Glycoconjugates for Lectin Recognition and Capture of Bacterial Pathogens. Bioconjugate Chem. 2010;21:2065–75.
Dwivedi HP, Smiley RD, Jaykus L-A. Selection and characterization of DNA aptamers with binding selectivity to Campylobacter jejuni using whole-cell SELEX. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2010;87:2323–34.
Kutter E, Sulakvelidze A. Bacteriophages: biology and applications. Florida: CRC Press; 2004.
Ivnitski D, Abdel-Hamid I, Atanasov P, Wilkins E. Biosensors for detection of pathogenic bacteria. Biosens Bioelectron. 1999;14:599–624.
Ahmed A, Rushworth JV, Hirst NA, Millner PA. Biosensors for whole-cell bacterial detection. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2014;27(3):631–46. doi:10.1128/CMR.00120-13.
Krafft C, Dietzek B, Popp J. Raman and CARS microspectroscopy of cells and tissues. Analyst. 2009;134(6):1046–57.
Jarvis RM, Goodacre R. Discrimination of bacteria using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. Anal Chem. 2004;76:40–7.
Walter A, Marz A, Schumacher W, Rosch P, Popp J. Towards a fast, high specific and reliable discrimination of bacteria on strain level by means of SERS in a microfluidic device. Lab Chip. 2011;11(6):1013–21.
Jeanmaire DL, van Duyne RP. Surface Raman spectroelectrochemistry part I. heterocyclic, aromatic, and aliphatic amines adsorbed on the anodized silver electrode. J Electroanal Chem. 1977;84:1–20.
Pahlow S, Meisel S, Cialla-May D, Weber K, Rosch P, Popp J. Isolation and identification of bacteria by means of Raman spectroscopy. Adv Drug Deliver Rev. 2015;89:105–20.
Pettinger B, Schambach P, Villagomez CJ, Scott N. Tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy: near-fields acting on a few molecules. Annu Rev Phys Chem. 2012;63:379–99.
Etchegoin PG, Lacharmoise PD, Le Ru RC. Influence of photostability on single-molecule surface enhanced Raman scattering enhancement factors. Anal Chem. 2009;81:682–8.
Yang X, Gu C, Qian F, Li Y, Zhang JZ. Highly sensitive detection of proteins and bacteria in aqueous solution using surface-enhanced Raman scattering and optical fibers. Anal Chem. 2011;83(15):5888–94.
Sengupta A, Mujacic M, Davis EJ. Detection of bacteria by surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. Anal Bioanal Chem. 2006;386(5):1379–86.
Cowcher DP, Xu Y, Goodacre R. Portable, quantitative detection of Bacillus bacterial spores using surface-enhanced Raman scattering. Anal Chem. 2013;85(6):3297–302.
Temur E, Boyacı İH, Tamer U, Unsal H, Aydogan N. A highly sensitive detection platform based on surface-enhanced Raman scattering for Escherichia coli enumeration. Anal Bioanal Chem. 2010;397(4):1595–604.
Guven B, Basaran-Akgul N, Temur E, Tamer U, Boyac IH. SERS-based sandwich immunoassay using antibody coated magnetic nanoparticles for Escherichia coli enumeration. Analyst. 2011;136(4):740–8.
Stockle RM, Suh YD, Deckert V, Zenobi R. Nanoscale chemical analysis by tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. Chem Phys Lett. 2000;318:131–6.
Rusciano G, Zito G, Isticato R, Sirec T, Ricca E, Bailo E, et al. Nanoscale chemical imaging of Bacillus subtilis spores by combining tip-enhanced Raman scattering and advanced statistical tools. ACS Nano. 2014;8:12300–9.
Neugebauer U, Rosch P, Schmitt M, Popp J, Julien C, Rasmussen A, et al. On the way to nanometer-sized information of the bacterial surface by tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. ChemPhysChem. 2006;7(7):1428–30.
Neugebauer U, Schmid U, Baumann K, Ziebuhr W, Kozitskaya S, Deckert V, et al. Towards a detailed understanding of bacterial metabolism-spectroscopic characterization of Staphylococcus epidermidis. ChemPhysChem. 2007;8(1):124–37.
Dementjev A, Kostkevičiene J. Applying the method of coherent anti-Stokes Raman microscopy for imaging of carotenoids in microalgae and cyanobacteria. J Raman Spectrosc. 2013;44(7):973–9.
Gaus K, Rosch P, Petry R, Peschke KD, Ronneberger O, Burkhardt H, et al. Classification of lactic acid bacteria with UV-resonance Raman spectroscopy. Biopolymers. 2006;82(4):286–90.
Scully MO, Kattawar GW, Lucht RP, Opatrny T, Pilloff H, Rebane A, et al. FAST CARS: engineering a laser spectroscopic technique for rapid identification of bacterial spores. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2002;99(17):10994–1001.
Morris MD, Wallan DJ. Resonance Raman spectroscopy. Anal Chem. 1979;51:182A–92A.
Jarvis RM, Goodacre R. Ultra-violet resonance Raman spectroscopy for the rapid discrimination of urinary tract infection bacteria. FEMS Microbiol Lett. 2004;232(2):127–32.
Stiles PL, Dieringer JA, Shah NC, Van Duyne RP. Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. Annu Rev Anal Chem. 2008;1:601–26.
Polisetti S, Bible AN, Morrell-Falveyb JL, Bohn PW. Raman chemical imaging of the rhizosphere bacterium Pantoea sp. YR343 and its co-culture with Arabidopsis thaliana. Analyst. 2016;141:2175–82.
de Kievit TR. Quorum sensing in Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms. Environ Microbiol. 2009;11(2):279–88.
Reen FJ, Mooij MJ, Holcombe LJ, McSweeney CM, McGlacken GP, Morrissey JP, et al. The Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS), and its precursor HHQ, modulate interspecies and interkingdom behaviour. FEMS Microbiol Ecol. 2011;77(2):413–28.
Polisetti S, Baig NF, Morales-Soto N, Shrout JD, Bohn PW. Spatial mapping of pyocyanin in Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacterial communities using surface enhanced Raman scattering. Appl Spectrosc. 2016. doi:10.1177/0003702816654167.
Nicolaou N, Xu Y, Goodacre R. Fourier transform infrared and Raman spectroscopies for the rapid detection, enumeration, and growth interaction of the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus and Lactococcus lactis ssp. cremoris in milk. Anal Chem. 2011;83(14):5681–7.
Bosch A, Miñán A, Vescina C, Degrossi J, Gatti B, Montanaro P, et al. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy for rapid identification of nonfermenting Gram-negative bacteria isolated from sputum samples from cystic fibrosis patients. J Clin Microbiol. 2008;46(8):2535–46.
Blacker TS, Mann ZF, Gale JE, Ziegler M, Bain AJ, Szabadkai G, et al. Separating NADH and NADPH fluorescence in live cells and tissues using FLIM. Nat Commun. 2014;5:3936.
van den Berg PAW, van Hoek A, Walentas CD, Perham RN, Visser AJWG. Flavin fluorescence dynamics and photoinduced electron transfer in Escherichia coli glutathione reductase. Biophys J. 1998;74(4):2046–58.
Chapman JS, Georgopapadakou NH. Routes of quinolone permeation in Escherichia coli. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1988;32(4):438–42.
Teale FWJ, Weber G. Ultraviolet fluorescence of the aromatic amino acids. Biochem J. 1957;65(3):476–82.
Balestrino D, Hamon MA, Dortet L, Nahori MA, Pizarro-Cerda J, Alignani D, et al. Single-cell techniques using chromosomally tagged fluorescent bacteria to study Listeria monocytogenes infection processes. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2010;76(11):3625–36.
Ormo M, Cubitt AB, Kallio K, Gross LA, Tsien RY, Remington SJ. Crystal structure of the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein. Science. 1996;273:1392.
Miller WG, Bates AH, Horn ST, Brandl MT, Wachtel MR, Mandrell RE. Detection on surfaces and in Caco-2 cells of Campylobacter jejuni cells transformed with new gfp, yfp, and cfp marker plasmids. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2000;66:5426–36.
Ransom EM, Ellermeier CD, Weiss DS. Use of mCherry red fluorescent protein for studies of protein localization and gene expression in Clostridium difficile. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2015;81(5):1652–60.
van Zyl WF, Deane SM, Dicks LM. Use of the mCherry fluorescent protein to study intestinal colonization by Enterococcus mundtii ST4SA and Lactobacillus plantarum 423 in mice. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2015;81(17):5993–6002.
Flynn JD, Haas BL, Biteen JS. Plasmon-enhanced fluorescence from single proteins in living bacteria. J Phys Chem C. 2016;120(37):20512–7.
Bastiaens PIH, Majoul IV, Verveer PJ, Soling H-D, Jovin TM. Imaging the intracellular trafficking and state of the AB5 quaternary structure of cholera toxin. EMBO J. 1996;15:4246.
van Oosten M, Schafer T, Gazendam JAC, Ohlsen K, Tsompanidou E, de Goffau MC, et al. Real-time in vivo imaging of invasive- and biomaterial-associated bacterial infections using fluorescently labelled vancomycin. Nat Commun. 2013;4:2584.
Ning X, Lee S, Wang Z, Kim D, Stubblefield B, Gilbert E, et al. Maltodextrin-based imaging probes detect bacteria in vivo with high sensitivity and specificity. Nat Mater. 2011;10:602–7.
Panizzi P, Nahrendorf M, Figueiredo J-L, Panizzi J, Marinelli B, Iwamoto Y, et al. In Vivo detection of Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis by targeting pathogen-specific prothrombin activation. Nat Med. 2011;17:1142–6.
Meyer P, Dworkin J. Applications of fluorescence microscopy to single bacterial cells. Res Microbiol. 2007;158(3):187–94.
Krause M, Rosch P, Radt B, Popp J. Localizing and identifying living bacteria in an abiotic environment by a combination of Raman and fluorescence microscopy. Anal Chem. 2008;80:8568–75.
Disney MD, Zheng J, Swager TM, Seeberger PH. Detection of bacteria with carbohydrate-functionalized fluorescent polymers. J Am Chem Soc. 2004;126(41):13343–6.
Bruchez M Jr, Moronne M, Gin P, Weiss S, Paul Alivisatos A. Semiconductor nanocrystals as fluorescent biological labels. Science. 1998;281:2013–6.
Chan WCW, Nie S. Quantum dot bioconjugates for ultrasensitive nonisotopic detection. Science. 1998;281:2016–18.
Ohk SH, Koo OK, Sen T, Yamamoto CM, Bhunia AK. Antibody-aptamer functionalized fibre-optic biosensor for specific detection of Listeria monocytogenes from food. J Appl Microbiol. 2010;109(3):808–17.
Ohk SH, Bhunia AK. Multiplex fiber optic biosensor for detection of Listeria monocytogenes, Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Salmonella enterica from ready-to-eat meat samples. Food Microbiol. 2013;33(2):166–71.
Nicolini AM, Fronczek CF, Yoon JY. Droplet-based immunoassay on a ‘sticky’ nanofibrous surface for multiplexed and dual detection of bacteria using smartphones. Biosens Bioelectron. 2015;67:560–9.
Kong Y, Yao H, Ren H, Subbian S, Cirillo SLG, Sacchettini JC, et al. Imaging tuberculosis with endogenous β-lactamase reporter enzyme fluorescence in live mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2010;107:12239–44.
Haes AJ, Van Duyne RP. Preliminary studies and potential applications of localized surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy in medical diagnostics. Expert Rev Mol Diagn. 2004;4:527–37.
Willets KA, Van Duyne RP. Localized surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and sensing. Annu Rev Phys Chem. 2007;58:267–97.
Lokuge IS, Bohn PW. Voltage-tunable volume transitions in nanoscale films of poly(hydroxyethyl methacrylate) surfaces grafted onto gold. Langmuir. 2005;21:1979–85.
Hall WP, Ngatia SN, Van Duyne RP. LSPR biosensor signal enhancement using nanoparticle–antibody conjugates. J Phys Chem C. 2011;115:1410–4.
He L, Musick MD, Nicewarner SR, Salinas FG, Benkovic SJ, Natan MJ, et al. Colloidal Au-enhanced surface plasmon resonance for ultrasensitive detection of DNA hybridization. J Am Chem Soc. 2000;122:9071–7.
Li Y, Wark AW, Lee HJ, Corn RM. Single-nucleotide polymorphism genotyping by nanoparticle-enhanced surface plasmon resonance imaging measurements of surface ligation reactions. Anal Chem. 2006;78:3158–64.
Yang L, Bashir R. Electrical/electrochemical impedance for rapid detection of foodborne pathogenic bacteria. Biotechnol Adv. 2008;26(2):135–50.
Banerjee I, Pangule RC, Kane RS. Antifouling coatings: recent developments in the design of surfaces that prevent fouling by proteins, bacteria, and marine organisms. Adv Mater. 2011;23(6):690–718.
Hulteen JC, Van Duyne RP. Nanosphere lithography: a materials general fabrication process for periodic particle array surfaces. J Vac Sci Technol, A. 1995;13:1553–8.
Jensen TR, Malinsky MD, Haynes CL, Van Duyne RP. Nanosphere lithography: tunable localized surface plasmon resonance spectra of silver nanoparticles. J Phys Chem B. 2000;104:10549–56.
Haes AJ, Van Duyne RP. A nanoscale optical biosensor: sensitivity and selectivity of an approach based on the localized surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy of triangular silver nanoparticles. J Am Chem Soc. 2002;124:10596–604.
Guo L, Kim DH. LSPR biomolecular assay with high sensitivity induced by aptamer–antigen–antibody sandwich complex. Biosens Bioelectron. 2012;31(1):567–70.
Yoo SM, Kim DK, Lee SY. Aptamer-functionalized localized surface plasmon resonance sensor for the multiplexed detection of different bacterial species. Talanta. 2015;132:112–7.
Acknowledgement
Work in the authors’ laboratory described in this article was funded by the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases under Grant 1RO1AI113219-01.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
About this article
Cite this article
Hu, J., Bohn, P.W. Optical Biosensing of Bacteria and Bacterial Communities. J. Anal. Test. 1, 4 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s41664-017-0002-z
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s41664-017-0002-z