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Recent advances in the development of immunoassays and nucleic acid assays have improved the performance and increased the sensitivity of sensors that are based on biochemical recognition. The new approaches taken by researchers include detecting pathogens by detecting their nucleic acids, using new nontoxic reporter entities for generating signals, and downscaling and miniaturizing sensors to micromigration and microfluidic formats. This dissertation connects some of these successful approaches, thereby leading to the development of novel nucleic acid sensors for rapid and easy detection of pathogens. The author's goal was to develop diagnostic tools that enable investigators to detect pathogens rapidly and on site. While the sensors can be used to detect any pathogen, the author first customized them for detecting particularly Cryptosporidium parvum, a pathogen whose detection is important, yet presents many challenges. Chapter 2 of this thesis presents a novel test-strip for the detection of C. parvum. The test-strip is designed to detect nucleic acids rather than proteins or other epitopes. While test strips are commonly used for sensors based on immunological recognition, this format is very new in applications in which nucleic acids are detected. Further, to indicate the presence or absence of a specific target on the test strip, dye-entrapped, oligonucleotide-tagged liposomes are employed. Using liposomes as reporter particles has advantages over using other reporter labels, because the cavity that the phospholipidic membranes of the liposomes form can be filled with up to 106 dye molecules. By using heterobifunctional linkers liposomes can be tagged with oligonucleotides, thereby enabling their use in nucleic acid hybridization assays. The developed test-strip provides an internal control. The limit of detection is 2.7 fmol/mL with a sample volume of 30 mL. In chapter 3 the detection of nucleic acids by means of oligonucleotide-tagged liposomes is scaled down to a microfluidic assay format. Because the application of biosensors to microfluidic formats is very new in the field of analytical chemistry, the first part of this chapter is devoted to developing the design and the method to fabricate the microchip devices. The performance of the microchips is then optimized by investigating the interactions of nucleic acids and liposomes with the material the chips consist of and by passivating the surface of the chips with blocking reagents. The developed microfluidic chip enabled us to reduce the sample volume needed for one assay to 12.5 mL. The limit of detection of this assay was determined to be 0.4 fmol/mL. Chapters 4 and 5 expand on the development of the microfluidic assay. A prototype microfluidic array that is able to detect multiple analytes in a single sample simultaneously is developed. Using such an array will enable investigators to detect pathogens that occur in the same environment, for example, C. parvum and Giardia duodenalis by conducting a single test. The array's ability to perform multiple sample analysis is shown by detecting different concentrations of target nucleic acids. Further, the author developed a microfluidic chip in which interdigitated microelectrode arrays (IDAs) that consist of closely spaced microelectrodes are integrated. The IDAs facilitate electrochemical detection of cryptosporidial RNA. Electrochemical detection schemes offer benefits of technical simplicity, speed, and sensitivity. In this project liposomes are filled with electrochemically active molecules and are then utilized to generate electrochemical signals. Chapter 6 explores the feasibility of liposomes for enhancing signals derived from nucleic acid hybridization in surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy. SPR spectroscopy offers advantages because nucleic acid hybridization can be monitored in real time and under homogeneous conditions because no washing steps are required. SPR spectroscopy is very sensitive and it can be expected that, in the future, SPR will be integrated into microfluidic nucleic acid sensors.
The internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) of the ribosomal gene repeat is an increasingly important phylogenetic marker whose RNA secondary structure is widely conserved across eukaryotic organisms. The ITS2 database aims to be a comprehensive resource on ITS2 sequence and secondary structure, based on direct thermodynamic as well as homology modelled RNA folds. Results: (a) A rebuild of the original ITS2 database generation scripts applied to a current NCBI dataset reveal more than 60,000 ITS2 structures. This more than doubles the contents of the original database and triples it when including partial structures. (b) The end-user interface was rewritten, extended and now features user-defined homology modelling. (c) Other possible RNA structure discovery methods (namely suboptimal and shape folding) prove helpful but are not able to replace homology modelling. (d) A use case of the ITS2 database in conjunction with other tools developed at the department gave insight into molecular phylogenetic analysis with ITS2.
Chlamydia are Gram-negative obligate intracellular bacteria responsible for a wide spectrum of relevant diseases. Due to their biphasic developmental cycle Chlamydia depend on an intact host cell for replication and establishment of an acute infection. Chlamydia have therefore evolved sophisticated strategies to inhibit programmed cell death (PCD) induced by a variety of stimuli and to subvert the host immune system. This work aimed at elucidating whether an infection with C. trachomatis can influence the cellular response to double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). The synthesis of dsRNA is a prominent feature of viral replication inside infected cells that can induce both PCD and the activation of a cellular innate immune response. In order to mimic chlamydial and viral co-infections, Chlamydia-infected cells were transfected with polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (polyI:C), a synthetic dsRNA. In the first part of this work it was investigated whether C. trachomatis-infected host cells could resist apoptosis induced by polyI:C. A significant reduction in apoptosis, determined by PARP cleavage and DNA fragmentation, could be observed in infected cells. It could be shown that processing of the initiator caspase-8 was inhibited in infected host cells. This process was dependent on early bacterial protein synthesis and was specific for dsRNA because apoptosis induced by TNFalpha was not blocked at the level of caspase-8. Interestingly, the activation of cellular factors involved in apoptosis induction by dsRNA, most importantly PKR and RNase L, was not abrogated in infected cells. Instead, RNA interference experiments revealed the crucial role of cFlip, a cellular caspase-8 inhibitor, for chlamydial inhibition of dsRNA-induced apoptosis. First data acquired by co-immunoprecipitation experiments pointed to an infection-induced concentration of cFlip in the dsRNA-induced death complex of caspase-8 and FADD. In the second part of this work, the chlamydial influence on the first line of defense against viral infections, involving expression of interferons and interleukins, was examined. Activation of the interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF-3) and the NF-kappaB transcription factor family member p65, both central regulators of the innate immune response to dsRNA, was altered in Chlamydia-infected epithelial cells. polyI:C-induced degradation of IkappaB-alpha, the inhibitor of NF-kappaB, was accelerated in infected cells which was accompanied by a change in nuclear translocation of the transcription factor. Translocation of IRF-3, in contrast, was significantly blocked upon infection. Together the data presented here demonstrate that infection with C. trachomatis can drastically alter the cellular response to dsRNA and imply an impact of chlamydial infections on the outcome of viral super-infections.