From Infection to Detection: Imaging S. aureus - host interactions

U. Neugebauer, Große C, Bauerl M, Kemper B, Barroso A, Bauwens A, Glueder M, Woerdemann M, Dewenter L, Denz C, Kloß S, Rösch P, Sabat A, Schütze K, Friedrich A, von Bally G, Popp J, Mellmann A

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Infections, particularly those due to drug-resistant pathogens, significantly increase morbidity and mortality as well ascost of treatment and length of hospital stays. Staphylococcus aureus, a highly human-adapted organism, is the mostcommon pathogen causing nosocomial infections. Among S. aureus, especially methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA)causes problems in therapy and infection control. Understanding the mechanisms of infections is as important as the developmentof rapid tools for diagnosis. Within the Photonics4Life project "From Infection to Detection" these two goalsare addressed. Modern optical technologies, such as multi-focus quantitative digital holographic microscopy (DHM)phase contrast, holographic optical tweezers (HOT) and Raman spectroscopy have been employed to analyse the cellmorphology, cell dynamics and cellular refractive index of endothelial cells before and after incubation with S. aureus(or with model bacteria for HOT and DHM analysis). Individual bacteria inside the cells have been visualized and definedinfection scenarios at the single cell level could be created. Finally, optical techniques were evaluated for furthersub-typing of S. aureus strains and compared to the established spa typing method.

Details about the publication

Volume57
Page range503-506
StatusPublished
Release year2012
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1515/bmt-2012-4284

Authors from the University of Münster

Barroso Pena, Alvaro
Institute of Applied Physics
Denz, Cornelia
Professur für Angewandte Physik (Prof. Denz)
Dewenter, Lena
Institute of Applied Physics
Kemper, Björn
Center for Biomedical Optics and Photonics (CeBOP)
Von Bally, Gert
Center for Biomedical Optics and Photonics (CeBOP)
Wördemann, Mike
Institute of Applied Physics