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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

DNA Capture via Magnetic Beads in a Microfluidic Platformfor Rapid Detection of Antibiotic Resistance Genes

Harris, David Hyrum 01 July 2019 (has links)
Antibiotic resistant infections are a growing health care concern, with many cases reported annually. Infections can cause irreversible bodily damage or death if they are not diagnosed in a timely matter. To rapidly diagnose antibiotic resistance in infections, it is important to be able to capture and isolate the DNA coding for the resistance genes. This is challenging because bacteria are present in blood in minute concentrations. To enrich the DNA to detectable levels, I modified magnetic microbeads with ssDNA sequences complementary to the target DNA to capture the DNA via hybridization. I compared DNA capture efficiency in three different methods: Co-flow, packed bead bed, and pre-hybridization. The pre-hybridized method worked better than the other two. Since pre-hybridization involved mixing, I chose to study mixing in a microfluidic device. The mixing chamber was a well carved out of PMMA placed between two electromagnets. To test the mixing well, beads and capture DNA were placed in it, and the electromagnets were subjected to different frequencies, including symmetric or asymmetric magnetic fields. For each condition the capture efficiency was determined by measuring the relative fluorescence units (RFU). A 100 Hz asymmetric magnetic field had the best capture efficiency out of all conditions. These results demonstrate a path for enriching low concentrations of DNA to detectable levels, and future work should be done to develop electromagnetic mixing in microfluidic devices.
2

Enhanced capture of magnetic microbeads using sequentially switched electroosmotic flow

Das, Debarun 02 June 2015 (has links)
No description available.
3

Novel diagnostic microarray assay formats towards comprehensive on-site analysis

Gantelius, Jesper January 2009 (has links)
Advances in molecular methods for analyzing DNA, RNA and proteins in humans as well as in other animals, plants, fungi, bacteria or viruses have greatly increased the resolution with which we can study life’s complexity and dynamics on earth. While genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic laboratory tools for molecular diagnosis of disease are rapidly becoming more comprehensive, the access to such advanced yet often expensive and centralized procedures is limited. There is a great need for rapid and comprehensive diagnostic methods in low-resource settings or contexts where a person can not or will not go to a hospital or medical laboratory, yet where a clinical analysis is urgent. In this thesis, results from development and characterization of novel technologies for DNA and protein microarray analysis are presented. Emphasis is on methods that could provide rapid, cost-effective and portable analysis with convenient readout and retained diagnostic accuracy. The first study presents a magnetic bead-based approach for DNA microarray analysis for a rapid visual detection of single nucleotide polymorphisms. In the second work, magnetic beads were used as detection reagents for rapid differential detection of presence of pestiviral family members using a DNA oligonucleotide microarray with read-out by means of a tabletop scanner or a digital camera. In paper three, autoimmune responses from human sera were detected on a protein autoantigen microarray, again by means of magnetic bead analysis. Here, special emphasis was made in comprehensively comparing the performance of the magnetic bead detection to common fluorescence-based detection. In the fourth study, an immunochromatographic lateral flow protein microarray assay is presented for application in the classification of contagious pleuropneumonia from bovine serum samples. The analysis could be performed within 10 minutes using a table top scanner, and the performance of the assay was shown to be comparable to that of a cocktail ELISA. In the fifth paper, the lateral flow microarray framework is investigated in further detail by means of experiments and numerical simulation. It was found that downstream effects play an important role, and the results further suggest that the downstream binding profiles may find use in simple affinity evaluation. / QC 20100713
4

Caractérisation in situ du développement d'un biofilm par suivi de microbilles à l'aide d'une méthode de corrélation d'images numériques / In situ characterization of biofilm development by tracking microbead using a digital image correlation method

Boudarel, Heloïse 07 December 2018 (has links)
La connaissance et la maîtrise de la présence d’un biofilm représentent aujourd’hui un challenge important. Dans le contexte d’étude des capacités de développement des biofilms, BioFilm Control fait figure de pionnier grâce à leur test nommé Biofilm Ring Test. Basé sur une sollicitation du biofilm via l’attraction, par un aimant, de microbilles magnétiques au centre du puits, le test évalue la présence de biofilm par l’absence de regroupement des billes au centre du puits à un instant donné. L’enjeu de ce travail est de décliner le BioFilm Ring Test® en un examen dynamique, non destructif et à l’échelle microscopique. Dans le biofilm, la matrice polymérique assure la cohésion entre cellules et confère une protection aux bactéries qui vivent au sein du biofilm. Les propriétés mécaniques de la matrice sont donc un indicateur de l’état local du biofilm. La recherche de ces paramètres permet de pouvoir prédire et contrôler la formation, l’accumulation et la dissémination de bactéries propageant les infections et/ou l’encrassement. Néanmoins, la détermination des propriétés mécaniques des biofilms nécessite des précautions et l’usage d’un vocabulaire homogénéisé et de méthodes unifiées au sein de la communauté. Pour cela, une première partie de ce travail de thèse consiste en la proposition d’un guide de bonnes pratiques quant à la caractérisation mécanique du matériau biofilm. Dans la deuxième partie de ce travail de thèse, une méthodologie pour le suivi de particules micrométriques au sein d’un matériau vivant est développée. Le recours à des techniques d’imagerie telle que la corrélation d’images numériques permet de remonter à la cinématique du mouvement de chacune des microbilles, qui servent de marqueurs au sein des images traitées, par une mesure sans contact. Cette méthode est ensuite appliquée à l’étude de la formation de biofilm. L’originalité de ce travail repose sur la caractérisation de l’évolution de la typologie du mouvement des microbilles métalliques lors de la formation des biofilms. Il s’agit là de discriminer des comportements de billes révélateurs de la genèse d’un biofilm. En tirant parti de l’observation du mouvement de microbilles inertes introduites dans le milieu bactérien, on détecte des changements de typologies de trajectoires qui semblent être reliés à l’activité de bactéries sessiles, adhésion ou formation de matériel extracellulaire. Les résultats montrent que les diverses étapes de la formation de biofilms sont caractérisées, ce qui permet notamment de discriminer la présence ou non d’antibiotiques mélangés avec les bactéries et d’apprécier leur efficacité. Dans une dernière partie, des recherches encore en phase de développement sont exposées. Elles s’intéressent au comportement du biofilm sous sollicitation volumique. Il s’agit dans ce cas d’observer le biofilm en champ lointain et de suivre le déplacement ou la déformation d’un marquage constitué d’un agglomérat de microbilles, plongées dans un champ magnétique. Ces premiers travaux pourront servir d’ébauche à des travaux futurs dans le but de caractériser quantitativement le matériau biofilm. / The control of biofilm formation constitutes an important challenge in many industrial and biomedical applications. In this context, BioFilm Control is a pioneer thanks to its test named BioFilm Ring Test. Based on the immobilisation of magnetic microbeads by adherent cells, the assay allows to detect the presence of biofilm at a given time. The aim of this phD project is to translate the BioFilm Ring Test® into a dynamic, non-destructive and microscopic examination of the biofilm state. Whithin the biofilm, the matrix provides a strong cohesion between cells and therefore increases their resistance against chemical or mechanical stress in comparison to their planktonic counterparts. The mechanical properties of the matrix are therefore an indicator of the local state of the biofilm. The search for these parameters makes it possible to predict and control the formation, accumulation and spread of bacteria that propagate infections and/or biofouling. Nevertheless, the determination of the mechanical properties of biofilms requires precautions and the use of an homogenized vocabulary and methods that are unified within the community. To this end, a first part of this thesis work consists in proposing a guide of good practices for the mechanical characterization of biofilm material. In the second part of this work, a methodology for tracking of micrometric particles within a living material is developed. The use of full field measurement method such as digital image correlation makes it possible to trace the kinematics of the motion of each particle, which is a probe of the local environment. This method is then applied to the study of the biofilm formation, by non-contact measurement. The originality of this work is based on the characterization of the change in the microbeads movement during the biofilm formation steps. The aim is to discriminate bead behaviours that reveal the genesis of a biofilm. By taking advantage of the observation of the movement of inert microbeads embedded into the bacterial environment, we detect changes of type of trajectories which seem to be correlated to the activity of sessiles bacteria, adhesion or formation of extracellular material. The results show that the various stages of the biofilm formation are characterized by a non-destructive test. Especially, It allows to appreciate the efficiency of an antibiotic. In the last part, research still in a development phase is presented. It concerns the behaviour of biofilm under mechanical solicitation. This involves observing the biofilm in the far field and following the displacement or deformation of a pattern consisting of an agglomerate of microbeads immersed in a magnetic field. This initial work can be used as a draft for future work to quantitatively characterize the biofilm material.

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