Michigan Technological University scientists have come up with a way to make a strain of E. coli glow under fluorescent light, a technique that may one day help track down all sorts
Michigan Technological University scientists have come up with a way to make a strain of E. coli glow under fluorescent light, a technique that may one day help track down all sorts of pathogens, and even prove beneficial in fight against breast cancer.
Associate Professor of Chemistry Haiying Liu, who led the research project, points out that E. coli bacteria are naturally found in animal intestines and are usually harmless, but when virulent strains contaminate food, they can cause serious illness and even death.Liu's trick takes advantage of E.coli's affinity for the sugar mannose.
During the study, the research team attached mannose molecules to specially engineered fluorescent polymers, and stirred them into a container of water swimming with E. coli.
The researchers said that microscopic hairs on the bacteria, called pili, hooked onto the mannose molecules like Velcro, effectively coating the bacteria with the polymers.
They later shined white light onto E. coli colonies growing in the solution, and the bugs lit up like blue fireflies.
"They became very colorful and easy to see under a microscope," said Liu.
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If blue means E. coli, they add, fuchsia may one day mean influenza.
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He says that upon introduction to the vascular system, the polymers would travel through the body, stick to tumour cells, and then illuminated by a type of infrared light that shines through human tissue.
The researcher says that the glowing polymers would provide a beacon to pinpoint the location of the malignant cells, and allow surgeons to easily identify and remove malignant cells while minimizing damage to healthy tissue.
An article on the team's work on E. coli has been published in the journal Chemistry.
Source-ANI
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