Abstract

Bacterial FT-IR signals are extremely specific and highly reproducible, making FT-IR an efficient tool for bacterial typing at the subspecies level. The polysaccharide and nucleic acid FT-IR regions (1200–900 cm−1) are recommended as a precise and reproducible pattern for bacterial typing. However, proteins are the major macromolecules present in bacteria, and the FT-IR spectral region of proteins (1800–1300 cm−1) is conceivably an important factor in bacterial typing. In this study, we investigated the influence of water on bacterial protein amide bands by comparing spectra obtained with and without FT-IR system dehydration. Eight Escherichia coli, ten Klebsiella pneumoniae, and eleven Staphylococcus aureus strains were typed by FT-IR under different conditions in a blinded experimental setup. Hierarchical clustering analysis (HCA) showed that, when protein signals were included (1800–900 cm−1), the typing accuracies for select E. coli, K. pn and S. aureus strains without system dehydration were 50%, 30% and 18.2%, respectively. However, the accuracies greatly improved to 100%, 90% and 90.9% when the FT-IR system was dehydrated. These results indicate that the FT-IR signals of protein amide bands are beneficial for bacterial typing.

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