Review
Molecular methods for pathogen and microbial community detection and characterization: Current and potential application in diagnostic microbiology

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meegid.2012.01.011Get rights and content

Abstract

Clinical microbiology laboratories worldwide have historically relied on phenotypic methods (i.e., culture and biochemical tests) for detection, identification and characterization of virulence traits (e.g., antibiotic resistance genes, toxins) of human pathogens. However, limitations to implementation of molecular methods for human infectious diseases testing are being rapidly overcome allowing for the clinical evaluation and implementation of diverse technologies with expanding diagnostic capabilities. The advantages and limitation of molecular techniques including real-time polymerase chain reaction, partial or whole genome sequencing, molecular typing, microarrays, broad-range PCR and multiplexing will be discussed. Finally, terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) and deep sequencing are introduced as technologies at the clinical interface with the potential to dramatically enhance our ability to diagnose infectious diseases and better define the epidemiology and microbial ecology of a wide range of complex infections.

Highlights

► Molecular methods are increasingly being used to diagnose infectious diseases in humans. ► Molecular methods for the identification, discovery/characterization of pathogens are discussed. ► Molecular analyses for measuring changes in the human microbiome during infection are described. ► Barriers remain to the implementation of molecular methods in diagnostic labs.

Keywords

Molecular methods
Pathogen
Diagnostic
Identification
Microbial community

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