Deformability Assessment of Waterborne Protozoa Using a Microfluidic-Enabled Force Microscopy Probe
Author(s) -
John S. McGrath,
Jos Quist,
James R. T. Seddon,
Stanley C. S. Lai,
Serge G. Lemay,
Helen Bridle
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0150438
Subject(s) - cryptosporidium parvum , cryptosporidium , filtration (mathematics) , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , apicomplexa , protozoa , atomic force microscopy , materials science , nanotechnology , protozoal disease , immunology , statistics , mathematics , malaria , feces
Many modern filtration technologies are incapable of the complete removal of Cryptosporidium oocysts from drinking-water. Consequently, Cryptosporidium -contaminated drinking-water supplies can severely implicate both water utilities and consumers. Existing methods for the detection of Cryptosporidium in drinking-water do not discern between non-pathogenic and pathogenic species, nor between viable and non-viable oocysts. Using FluidFM, a novel force spectroscopy method employing microchannelled cantilevers for single-cell level manipulation, we assessed the size and deformability properties of two species of Cryptosporidium that pose varying levels of risk to human health. A comparison of such characteristics demonstrated the ability of FluidFM to discern between Cryptosporidium muris and Cryptosporidium parvum with 86% efficiency, whilst using a measurement throughput which exceeded 50 discrete oocysts per hour. In addition, we measured the deformability properties for untreated and temperature-inactivated oocysts of the highly infective, human pathogenic C . parvum to assess whether deformability may be a marker of viability. Our results indicate that untreated and temperature-inactivated C . parvum oocysts had overlapping but significantly different deformability distributions.
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