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- Asthma
- HIV/AIDS
- Cancer
- Organ transplantation
- Corticosteroid Therapies
Serious fungal infections often occur as complications of these:
COPD
What has the highest incidence of life-threatening invasive Aspergillosis?
ICU patients, Lung Cancer, Hematologic Malignancies
After COPD, what are the succeeding high incidence cases of invasive Aspergillosis?
Invasive Aspergillosis and Invasive Candidiasis (Candidemia)
What are the top 2 in rankings for crude mortality of severe fungal disease?
Low sensitivity, Time-consuming, Contamination risk
Factors that can delay treatment and may lead to higher hospital costs
Direct Microscopy
Identifying specific morphological patterns help differentiate between various histopathological diagnoses of invasive fungal infections. However, this alone does not provide specific identification
Blood Cultures
Low sensitivity for diagnosing Candidemia
True
T or F: Non-blood cultures are non-specific
False
T or F: For Aspergillosis, cultures from respiratory tract secretions are very sensitive
a. Sputum
b. Bile/bronchoalveolar lavage
Aspergillosis is recovered from:
a) only 8-34% of patients with invasive Aspergillosis
b) 45-62% of such patients
Immunocompetent
Recovery of Aspergillus from respiratory tract often indicates colonization in ____ patients
Immunocompromised
Recovery of Aspergillus from respiratory tract strongly suggests invasive disease in ____ patients
Molecular Methods
These methods improve accuracy and quickness of fungal infections diagnosis
Taq Polymerase
Components of PCR: Enzyme that builds new strands
dNTPs (deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates)
Components of PCR:
- Raw materials used by the enzyme to synthesize new DNA strands
- Arranged based on the template strands as a guide
Primers
Components of PCR:
- Short custom-made sequences that adhere to the start of the target region
- Tells Taq Polymerase exactly where to start building
Buffers
Components of PCR: Help to maintain optimal condition for the reaction
Cofactors
Components of PCR:
- Help the primer adhere to the correct site
- Assist Taq Polymerase in functioning properly
- Added in the form of MgCl2
Denaturation at 95 degrees
First step in PCR where DNA is heated at a certain temperature to break the hydrogen bonds, creating two template strands for copying
Annealing at 55 degrees
- Second step in PCR where primers bracket the sequence of interest on the template in preparation for copying
- Magnesium helps these primers with its positive charge which stops the DNA and primers from repelling, while the buffer stabilizes the hydrogen bonds
Extension at 72 degrees
The last step of PCR where Taq polymerase moves along the template strand starting from the primer site, in the 5' to 3' direction, adding dNTPs to synthesize a new complementary DNA strand
Gel Electrophoresis
This is used after PCR commonly for genetic testing and infectious disease diagnosis
Real-Time/Quantitative PCR (RTQ-PCR)
This test uses reverse transcriptase to build DNA from RNA templates
Primers, Fluorescent Probes, DNA Polymerase
Components of RTQ-PCR
Fluoresence Detection
What is the additional step in RTQ-PCR where a signal is emitted as DNA is amplified
SYBR Green
This fluorescent reagent only attaches to dsDNA
TaqMan Probe
This fluorescent reagent is a short sequence that attaches to a specific target sequence that contains a glowing reporter component and a quencher
Ct Value
In an amplification, this is the point where the amplified product exceeds the threshold
True
T or F: Ct value and DNA concentration have an INVERSE relationship (low Ct value, high DNA conc)
Nested PCR
This modification of PCR is designed to improve specificity and sensitivity with 2 primer sets and 2 successive PCR reactions
- Primers
- Taq polymerase
- dNTPs
- Buffer
- Magnesium chloride
Master Mix components
Specific and Non-Specific
The first set of primers (outer primers) in nested PCR are used to shorten DNA containing the target region. This reproduces both ____ regions
Specific
The second round in nested PCR uses the products from the first amplification, where inner primers bind only to the ____ region, eliminating the other segments
Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification
- This rapid DNA amplification technique is isothermal at 67 degrees C
- It uses 4 to 6 primers to amplify DNA
FIP, F3, BIP, B3, Loop Forward, Loop Backward
What are the 6 primers used in LAMP, starting with the essential primers in the order they are used
Sputum
This is the sample used in LAMP for pathogen detection
DNA Polymerase
LAMP uses this enzyme with strand displacement for synthesis of new stands
F2c; F1c
In strand invasion, FIP binds to the ___ region to initiate synthesis (extension). While the ___ remains unpaired forming a 5' overhang
F3c
In step 2 of LAMP, F3 binds to the ___ upstream of F2, displacing the previous strand containing FIP to form a loop at one end
Self-Hybridization
The loop that forms in LAMP is due to this reaction between F1 and F1c
B2c; B1c
In reverse side initiation, BIP binds to the ___ region to initiate reverse synthesis causing the ___ portion to form a loop by hybridizing with B1
Dumbbell-shaped DNA Structure
What is the result of step 3 in LAMP?
Concatemeric DNA Products
The last step of LAMP uses the dumbbell DNA as a template, where loop primers speed up DNA synthesis resulting in multiple ____
1. ITS2
2. Clinical
3. Colorimetry, fluorescence, gel electrophoresis
Fallahi et al. (2019, Iran)
Target gene:
Specimen:
Detection:
1. anxC4
2. Sputum
3. Colorimetry, LFB, turbidity
Jiang et al. (2021, China)
Target gene:
Specimen:
Detection:
1. 5.8S rRNA, ITS1, ITS2
2. Blood
3. Fluorescence
Lim et al. (2022, Korea)
Target gene:
Specimen:
Detection:
Aspergillus; ITS1/ITS2/5.8S rRNA
anxC gene is commonly used for ___ while ____ are for Candida
Sanger Sequencing
A method used for determining the nucleotide sequence of DNA with a mechanism that uses a single primer to initiate DNA synthesis
Chain Termination Method or Dideoxynucleotides Chain Termination Sequencing
Other names for Sanger Sequencing
Frederick Sanger and colleagues, 1977
Who developed Sanger sequencing, and what year was it developed?
1. DNA sequence for chain termination PCR
2. Size separation by gel electrophoresis
3. Gel analysis and determination of DNA sequence
State the 3 steps of Sanger Sequencing
Chain Termination PCR
What special type of PCR is used in the first step of Saanger Sequencing that involves the addition of modified nucleotides called dideoxynucleotides (ddNTPs)?
True
T or F: In Sanger Sequencing, a low ratio of ddNTPs to normal dNTPs is used.
Millions to billions of DNA fragments terminated at random lengths by ddNTPs
What is the result of the first step of Sanger Sequencing?
Manual Sanger Sequencing
Determine if this is MANUAL or AUTOMATED Sanger Sequencing:
4 separate PCR reactions, each with only one type of ddNTP:
- ddTTP
- ddATP
- ddGTP
- ddCTP
Automated Sanger Sequencing
Determine if this is MANUAL or AUTOMATED Sanger Sequencing:
All ddNTPs are mixed in one reaction, and each ddNTP is tagged with a unique fluorescent label
Size
In the second step of Sanger sequencing, chain-terminated fragments are separated by what characteristic through gel electrophoresis?
Positive
In gel electrophoresis, DNA is negatively charged and moves toward the ______ electrode
Fragments are arranged from smallest to largest, bottom to top
What is the final results in the second step of Sanger Sequencing?
True
T or F: Smaller fragments move faster, while larger fragments move slower.
Manual Sanger Sequencing
Determine if this is MANUAL or AUTOMATED Sanger Sequencing:
Products from the 4 PCR reactions are run in four separate lanes with each lane corresponding to a specific ddNTP
Automated Sanger Sequencing
Determine if this is MANUAL or AUTOMATED Sanger Sequencing:
All fragments run in a single capillary gel inside the sequencing machine
bottom to top
In the third step of Sanger sequencing, the gel is read from _______ with each band corresponding to a specific nucleotide
5' to 3'
The synthesis in Sanger Sequencing is 5' to 3', so reading the band gives the _____ sequence
Manual Sanger Sequencing
Determine if this is MANUAL or AUTOMATED Sanger Sequencing:
User reads all four lanes at once
Automated Sanger Sequencing
Determine if this is MANUAL or AUTOMATED Sanger Sequencing:
A computer reads each band using fluorescent detection via a laser
Chromatogram
This is the output of Automated Sanger Sequencing that shows fluorescent peaks for each base along the DNA sequence
Sanger Sequencing ; PCR
In ______, the goal is to generate every possible length of DNA up to the full target length, while the goal of ______ is to duplicate the entire DNA sequence
True
T or F: PCR is used to amplify DNA in its entirety, and fragments of varying lengths may appear, but only by accident.
Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS)
A high-throughput, rapid, and cost-effective method that allow simultaneous sequencing of millions of DNA fragments such as whole genomes.
Massive Parallel Sequencing
Another name for Next-Generation Sequencing
- Genomics
- Transcriptomics
- Metagenomics (for comprehensive studies)
State the 3 applications of Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS)
1. Sample Extraction
2. Library Preparation
3. DNA Sequencing
State the 3 steps of Next-Generation Sequencing
1. Amplification
2. Addition of sequencing adaptors
State the two steps involved in library preparation performed in Next-Generation Sequencing
Library
This is produced in the PCR ampificatio step in NGS that is a collection of specifically sized DNA fragments compatible with the sequencing system
Adaptor ligation step
State the step in NGS wherein amplified DNA/cDNA fragments (amplicons) are bookended with specific oligonucleotide sequences
Parallel sequencing
DNA sequencing in NGS is performed via what method using an NGS platform?
Sequencer
This is the instrument used in NGS that reads the nucleotides one by one after loading of the library
Fluorescently labeled nucleotides
These are used in NGS to synthesize a complementary strand for each fragment.
wavelength ; intensity
In NGS, the fluorescence _____ and _____ determine the sequence of the templates
Third-Generation Sequencing
This method can read extremely long reads (up to several million bases) and it sequences DNA in real-time as it passes through a nanopore or during polymerase synthesis
- Oxford Nanopore
- PacBio SMRT (Single Molecule Real-Time)
2 examples of technologies using Third-Generation Sequencing
regions ; structural
Third-Generation Sequencing is useful for resolving complex genomic _____ and studying ____ variations
PacBio SMRT Sequencing
A single molecule and real-time sequencing technology that uses a closed and circular single-stranded DNA template
No PCR required
laser ; camera
In PacBio SMRT Sequencing, a _____ activates fluorescence signals, while a _____ system records the color and duration of the emitted light in real time
Zero Mode Waveguide (ZMW)
In PacBio SMRT Sequencing, the flow cell is equipped with a?
True
T or F: In PacBio SMRT Sequencing, base incorporation time is longer due to base modifications
Inter-pulse duration
In PacBio SMRT Sequencing, this can indicate a DNA modification event
Nanopore Sequencing Technology (ONT)
This method uses a nanopore inserted in an electrically resistant membrane that is then applied with electrical potential.
disruptions
In ONT, _____ in the current t indicate the identity of a specific molecule
hairpin structure
The DNA preparation of ONT includes a ______ to ligate double strands, enabling continuous reading of both strands
Polymerase / Helicase
In ONT, this binds and guides DNA into the pore
Ultra-Long Reads (ULRs)
Product of ONT that is above 300 kilobases, some close to 1M base pairs
True
T or F: PCR has high detection rates for fungal infections
• Standardization of techniques
• Interpretation of results
• Cost-effectiveness
• Emerging fungal pathogens
Challenges in Molecular Diagnosis of Fungal Infections
Rapid, Point-of-Care Tests
Identify the Future Direction of Molecular Dx of Fungal Infection:
- Quick results
- Require minimal lab infrastructure
- Suitable for resource-limited settings
Integration into Clinical Practice
Identify the Future Direction of Molecular Dx of Fungal Infection:
- Enables early diagnosis
- Supports personalized medicine
- Assists in surveillance and outbreak investigations
Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning
Identify the Future Direction of Molecular Dx of Fungal Infection:
- Can assist in data analysis, predictive modeling, and image analysis
- Seen as the future of molecular diagnosis
- LAM (Lipoarabinomannan assays)
- Lateral Flow Assays
2 examples of Future Rapid, Point-of-Care Tests in Molecular Dx of Fungal Infections
Tang et al. (2016)
Spx: Bronchoalveolar lavage, blood
Target: anxC4
Identify the Specimen and Target gene in the study of Tang et al. (2016)