Infectious diseases caused by bacterial pathogens remain one of the most common causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Rapid microbiological analysis is required for prompt treatment of bacterial infections and to facilitate antibiotic stewardship. This study reports an adaptable microfluidic system for rapid pathogen classification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) at the single-cell level. By incorporating tunable microfluidic valves along with real-time optical detection, bacteria can be trapped and classified according to their physical shape and size for pathogen classification. By monitoring their growth in the presence of antibiotics at the single-cell level, antimicrobial susceptibility of the bacteria can be determined in as little as 30 minutes compared with days required for standard procedures. The microfluidic system is able to detect bacterial pathogens in urine, blood cultures, and whole blood and can analyze polymicrobial samples. We pilot a study of 25 clinical urine samples to demonstrate the clinical applicability of the microfluidic system. The platform demonstrated a sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 83.33% for pathogen classification and achieved 100% concordance for AST.
We report on a hand-held multiplexed impedance sensor system and show evidence for impedance-based monitoring of the growth of a single bacterium.
The Human BioMolecular Atlas Program (HuBMAP) aims to create a multi-scale spatial atlas of the healthy human body at single-cell resolution by applying advanced technologies and disseminating resources to the community. As the HuBMAP moves past its first phase, creating ontologies, protocols and pipelines, this Perspective introduces the production phase: the generation of reference spatial maps of functional tissue units across many organs from diverse populations and the creation of mapping tools and infrastructure to advance biomedical research.HuBMAP was founded with the goal of establishing state-of-the-art frameworks for building spatial multiomic maps of non-diseased human organs at single-cell resolution 1 . During the first phase (2018)(2019)(2020)(2021)(2022), the priorities of the project included the validation and development of assay platforms; workflows for data processing, management, exploration and visualization; and the establishment of protocols, quality control standards and standard operating procedures. Extensive infrastructure was established through a coordinated effort among the various HuB-MAP integration, visualization and engagement teams, tissue-mapping centres, technology and tools development and rapid technology implementation teams and working groups 1 . Single-cell maps, predominantly consisting of two-dimensional (2D) spatial data as well as data from dissociated cells, were generated for several organs. The HuBMAP Data Portal (https://portal.hubmapconsortium.org) was established for open access to experimental tissue data and reference atlas data.The infrastructure was augmented with software tools for tissue data registration, processing, annotation, visualization, cell segmentation and automated annotation of cell types and cellular neighbourhoods from spatial data. Computational methods were developed for integrating multiple data types across scales and interpretation 2 . Standard reference terminology and a common coordinate framework spanning anatomical to biomolecular scales were established to ensure interoperability across organs, research groups and consortia 3 . Guidelines to capture high-quality multiplexed spatial data 4 were established including validated panels of cell-and structure-specific antibodies 5 . The first phase produced a large number of manuscripts (https://commonfund.nih.gov/ publications?pid=43) including spatially resolved single-cell maps [6][7][8][9][10][11] .The production phase of HuBMAP was launched in the autumn of 2022. The focus is on scaling data production spanning diverse biological variables (for example, age and ethnicity) and deployment and enhancement of analytical, visualization and navigational tools to generate high-resolution 3D accessible maps of major functional tissue units from more than 20 organs. This phase involves over 60 institutions and 400 researchers with opportunities for active intra-and inter-consortia collaborations and building a foundational resource for new biological insights and precision medicine. Below, ...
We present a mesodissection platform that retains the advantages of laser-based dissection instrumentation with the speed and ease of manual dissection. Tissue dissection in clinical laboratories is often performed by manually scraping a physician-selected region from standard glass slide mounts. In this manner, costs associated with dissection remain low, but spatial resolution is compromised. In contrast, laser microdissection methods maintain spatial resolution that matches the requirements for analysis of important tissue heterogeneity but remains costly and labor intensive. We demonstrate a microfluidic tool for rapid extraction of histological regions of interest from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue, which uses a simple and automated method that is compatible with most downstream enzymatic reactions, including protocols used for next-generation DNA sequencing.
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