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RNA signatures allow rapid identification of pathogens and antibiotic susceptibilities

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2012

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National Academy of Sciences
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Barczak, A. K., J. E. Gomez, B. B. Kaufmann, E. R. Hinson, L. Cosimi, M. L. Borowsky, A. B. Onderdonk, et al. 2012. “RNA Signatures Allow Rapid Identification of Pathogens and Antibiotic Susceptibilities.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 (16): 6217–22. doi:10.1073/pnas.1119540109.

Abstract

With rising rates of drug-resistant infections, there is a need for diagnostic methods that rapidly can detect the presence of pathogens and reveal their susceptibility to antibiotics. Here we propose an approach to diagnosing the presence and drug-susceptibility of infectious diseases based on direct detection of RNA from clinical samples. We demonstrate that species-specific RNA signatures can be used to identify a broad spectrum of infectious agents, including bacteria, viruses, yeast, and parasites. Moreover, we show that the behavior of a small set of bacterial transcripts after a brief antibiotic pulse can rapidly differentiate drug-susceptible and -resistant organisms and that these measurements can be made directly from clinical materials. Thus, transcriptional signatures could form the basis of a uniform diagnostic platform applicable across a broad range of infectious agents.

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