posted on 2015-12-17, 01:02authored byBing Li, Yong Qiu, Andrew Glidle, David McIlvenna, Qian Luo, Jon Cooper, Han-Chang Shi, Huabing Yin
Bacterial growth inhibition tests
have become a standard measure
of the adverse effects of inhibitors for a wide range of applications,
such as toxicity testing in the medical and environmental sciences.
However, conventional well-plate formats for these tests are laborious
and provide limited information (often being restricted to an end-point
assay). In this study, we have developed a microfluidic system that
enables fast quantification of the effect of an inhibitor on bacteria
growth and survival, within a single experiment. This format offers
a unique combination of advantages, including long-term continuous
flow culture, generation of concentration gradients, and single cell
morphology tracking. Using Escherichia coli and the
inhibitor amoxicillin as one model system, we show excellent agreement
between an on-chip single cell-based assay and conventional methods
to obtain quantitative measures of antibiotic inhibition (for example,
minimum inhibition concentration). Furthermore, we show that our methods
can provide additional information, over and above that of the standard
well-plate assay, including kinetic information on growth inhibition
and measurements of bacterial morphological dynamics over a wide range
of inhibitor concentrations. Finally, using a second model system,
we show that this chip-based systems does not require the bacteria
to be labeled and is well suited for the study of naturally occurring
species. We illustrate this using Nitrosomonas europaea, an environmentally important bacteria, and show that the chip system
can lead to a significant reduction in the period required for growth
and inhibition measurements (<4 days, compared to weeks in a culture
flask).