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Sexually transmitted diseases like gonorrhea and chlamydia, standardly treated with antibiotics, produce over 1.2 million cases annually in the emergency department (Jenkins et al., 2013). To determine a need for antibiotics, hospital labs utilize bacterial cultures to isolate and identify possible pathogens. Unfortunately, this technique can take up to 72

Sexually transmitted diseases like gonorrhea and chlamydia, standardly treated with antibiotics, produce over 1.2 million cases annually in the emergency department (Jenkins et al., 2013). To determine a need for antibiotics, hospital labs utilize bacterial cultures to isolate and identify possible pathogens. Unfortunately, this technique can take up to 72 hours, leading to several physicians presumptively treating patients based solely on history and physical presentation. With vague standards for diagnosis and a high percentage of asymptomatic carriers, several patients undergo two scenarios; over- or under-treatment. These two scenarios can lead to consequences like unnecessary exposure to antibiotics and development of secondary conditions (for example: pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility, etc.). This presents a need for a laboratory technique that can provide reliable results in an efficient matter. The viability of DNA-based chip targeted for C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae, and other pathogens of interest were evaluated. The DNA-based chip presented several advantages as it can be easily integrated as a routine test given the process is already well-known, is customizable and able to target multiple pathogens within a single test and has the potential to return results within a few hours as opposed to days. As such, implementation of a DNA-based chip as a diagnostic tool is a timely and potentially impactful investigation.
ContributorsCharoenmins, Patherica (Author) / Penton, Christopher (Thesis director) / Moore, Marianne (Committee member) / College of Integrative Sciences and Arts (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
Precision agriculture (PA) integrating information technology arouses broad interests and has been extensively studied to increase crop production and quality. Sensor probe technology, as one of the PA technologies, provides people with accurate real-time data, which has become an essential part of precision agriculture. Herein a novel microbial sensor probe

Precision agriculture (PA) integrating information technology arouses broad interests and has been extensively studied to increase crop production and quality. Sensor probe technology, as one of the PA technologies, provides people with accurate real-time data, which has become an essential part of precision agriculture. Herein a novel microbial sensor probe (MiProbE) is applied to monitor and study the growth of tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum L.) in real-time at germination and seedling stages. The result showed the raw Miprobe signals present day/night cycles. Alginate-coated probes effectively avoided signal response failure and were more sensitive to the treatments than uncoated probes. The probe signals from successfully germinated tomato seeds and non-germinated seeds were different, and the signal curve of the probe was closely related to the growth conditions of tomato seedlings. Specifically, the rising period of the probe signals coincided with the normal growth period of tomato seedlings. All probes exhibited sudden increases in signal strength after nutrient treatments; however, subsequent probe signals behaved differently: algae extract-treated probe signals maintained a high strength after the treatments; chemical fertilizer-treated probe signals decreased earlier after the treatments; chemical fertilizers and algae extract-treated probe signals also maintained a higher strength after the treatments. Moreover, the relationship between ash-free dry weight and the signal curve indicated that the signal strength positively correlates with the dry weight, although other biological activities can affect the probe signal at the same time. Further study is still needed to investigate the relationship between plant biomass and Miprobe signal.
ContributorsQi, Deyang (Author) / Weiss, Taylor (Thesis advisor) / Penton, Christopher (Committee member) / Park, Yujin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Biocrusts are microbial communities that inhabit arid soil surfaces, providing essential services to dryland ecosystems. A paradoxical filamentous cyanobacterium, Microcoleus vaginatus, resides within the biocrust. While is often pioneers the colonization of bare, nutrient-poor desert soils worldwide, it cannot fix dinitrogen. In nature, M. vaginatus coexists with a unique microbial

Biocrusts are microbial communities that inhabit arid soil surfaces, providing essential services to dryland ecosystems. A paradoxical filamentous cyanobacterium, Microcoleus vaginatus, resides within the biocrust. While is often pioneers the colonization of bare, nutrient-poor desert soils worldwide, it cannot fix dinitrogen. In nature, M. vaginatus coexists with a unique microbial community, a “cyanosphere”, that is characterized by a high abundance of diazotrophic heterotrophs. This suggests mutualistic relationships wherein nutrients are traded between phototrophs and heterotrophs. To explore these relationships, I performed targeted, pedigreed isolation of cyanosphere members and used co-cultivation to recreate the mutualism in culture. Results showed that, in the absence of fixed nitrogen, M. vaginatus grew well when co-cultured with cyanosphere diazotrophs, but only poorly or not at all when alone or with non-cyanosphere diazotrophs. In agreement with this, the experimental provision of nitrogen to natural populations resulted in a loss of diazotrophs from the cyanosphere compared to controls, but the addition of phosphorus did not. Additionally, the convergence of M. vaginatus trichomes into large bundles held by a common sheath was elicited in culture by the addition of cyanosphere diazotrophs, pointing to a role of cyanobacterial motility responses in the development of mutualistic interactions. I then demonstrated that the tendency of M. vaginatus to stay within bundles and close to the sheath-dwelling cyanosphere was dependent on the cyanosphere population size. This effect was likely mediated by glutamate that acted as a signaling molecule rather than as a N source and impacted the gliding speed and negative chemophobic responses on the cyanobacterium. Glutamate seems to be used as a cue to spatially optimize cyanobacterium-cyanosphere mutualistic exchanges. My findings have potential practical applications in restoration ecology, which I further pursued experimentally. Co-inoculation of soil with cyanosphere diazotrophs resulted in swifter development of biocrusts over inoculation with the cyanobacterium only. Further, their addition to disturbed native soils containing traces of cyanobacteria sufficed for the formation of cohesive biocrusts without cyanobacterial inoculation. The inclusion of such “biocrust probiotics” in biocrust restoration is recommended. Overall, this body of work elucidates the hitherto unknown role of beneficial heterotrophic bacteria in the initial formation and development of biocrusts.
ContributorsNelson, Corey (Author) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Thesis advisor) / Penton, C. Ryan (Committee member) / Gile, Gillian (Committee member) / Bean, Heather (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021