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The application of flow cytometry to the study of bacterial responses to
antibiotics.
Division of Microbiology, UMDS (St Thomas's Campus),
London.
Experiments were performed to determine whether a modern
flow cytometer could be used to study bacterial populations in suspension,
with particular reference to their morphological characteristics and their
responses to antibiotics. The FACScan, a commercial benchtop flow cytometer
fitted with an air-cooled laser, designed primarily for the study of
eukaryotic peripheral blood mononuclear cells, yielded reproducible data
relating to bacterial shape and internal architecture. It was sensitive enough
to detect changes in bacterial morphology on entry into the growth cycle and
after exposure to antibiotics. Antibiotic-induced morphological changes
affecting subpopulations of bacteria were sufficiently specific to allow
differentiation between antibiotics with different cell-wall enzyme targets.
Simultaneously, the effect of such antibiotics on the integrity of the outer
cell membrane of Escherichia coli was assessed by measurement of the
association of the nucleic acid-binding dye propidium iodide with the
bacteria. These experiments demonstrated complex patterns of probable
cell-wall leakage, related to the modes of action of the antibiotics. The
FACScan is a useful and sensitive tool for the study of the morphology and
physiology of bacterial populations in suspension, and is especially
applicable to the study of antibiotic action.
PMID: 8345510 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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