Detection of bacteria with carbohydrate-functionalized fluorescent polymers.

TitleDetection of bacteria with carbohydrate-functionalized fluorescent polymers.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2004
AuthorsDisney, MD, Zheng, J, Swager, TM, Seeberger, PH
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume126
Pagination13343–6
Date Publishedoct
ISSN0002-7863
KeywordsAnimals, Biosensing Techniques, Biosensing Techniques: methods, Carbodiimides, Carbodiimides: chemistry, Carbohydrate Metabolism, Carbohydrates, Carbohydrates: chemical synthesis, Carbohydrates: chemistry, Confocal, Erythrocytes, Erythrocytes: drug effects, Escherichia coli, Escherichia coli: isolation & purification, Escherichia coli: metabolism, Ethylamines, Ethylamines: chemistry, Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer, Fluorescent Dyes, Fluorescent Dyes: chemical synthesis, Fluorescent Dyes: chemistry, Galactosides, Galactosides: chemistry, Galactosides: metabolism, Hemagglutination Tests, Mannosides, Mannosides: chemistry, Mannosides: metabolism, Microscopy, Polymers, Polymers: chemical synthesis, Polymers: chemistry, Sheep
Abstract

Many pathogens that infect humans use cell surface carbohydrates as receptors to facilitate cell-cell adhesion. The hallmark of these interactions is their multivalency, or the simultaneous occurrence of multiple interactions. We have used a carbohydrate-functionalized fluorescent polymer, which displays many carbohydrate ligands on a single polymer chain, to allow for multivalent detection of pathogens. Incubation of a mannose-functionalized polymer with Escherichia coli yields brightly fluorescent aggregates of bacteria. These results show that carbohydrate-functionalized fluorescent polymers are a versatile detection method for bacteria. Future design of detectors for other pathogens only requires information on the carbohydrates bound by the organisms, which has been exhaustively reported in the literature.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15479090
DOI10.1021/ja047936i