Abstract

A new resazurin-based assay was evaluated and optimized using a microplate (384-well) format for high-throughput screening of antibacterial molecules against Klebsiella pneumoniae. Growth of the bacteria in 384-well plates was more effectively measured and had a >sixfold higher signal-to-background ratio using the resazurin-based assay compared with absorbance measurements at 600nm. Determination of minimum inhibitory concentrations of the antibiotics revealed that the optimized assay quantitatively measured antibacterial activity of various antibiotics. An edge effect observed in the initial assay was significantly reduced using a 1-h incubation of the bacteria-containing plates at room temperature. There was an approximately 10% decrease in signal variability between the edge and the middle wells along with improvement in the assay robustness (Z'=0.99). This optimized resazurin-based assay is an efficient, inexpensive, and robust assay that can quantitatively measure antibacterial activity using a high-throughput screening system to assess a large number of compounds for discovery of new antibiotics against K. pneumoniae.

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