JoVE Logo
Sportello unico per docenti

Accedi

Nanomechanics of Drug-target Interactions and Antibacterial Resistance Detection

DOI :

10.3791/50719-v

11:56 min

October 25th, 2013

October 25th, 2013

13,858 Views

1London Centre for Nanotechnology and Departments of Medicine, University College London

Acquired resistance to antibiotics is a major public healthcare problem and is presently ranked by the WHO as one of the greatest threats to human life. Here we describe the use of cantilever technology to quantify antibacterial resistance, critical to the discovery of novel and powerful agents against multidrug resistant bacteria.

Tags

Nanomechanics

-- Visualizzazioni

Video correlati

article

Combination of Adhesive-tape-based Sampling and Fluorescence in situ Hybridization for Rapid Detection of Salmonella on Fresh Produce

article

Amplifying and Quantifying HIV-1 RNA in HIV Infected Individuals with Viral Loads Below the Limit of Detection by Standard Clinical Assays

article

One-day Workflow Scheme for Bacterial Pathogen Detection and Antimicrobial Resistance Testing from Blood Cultures

article

Detection of Fluorescent Nanoparticle Interactions with Primary Immune Cell Subpopulations by Flow Cytometry

article

Rapid Screening of HIV Reverse Transcriptase and Integrase Inhibitors

article

A New Method for Qualitative Multi-scale Analysis of Bacterial Biofilms on Filamentous Fungal Colonies Using Confocal and Electron Microscopy

article

A Robust Pneumonia Model in Immunocompetent Rodents to Evaluate Antibacterial Efficacy against S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, K. pneumoniae, P. aeruginosa or A. baumannii

article

A High-throughput Platform for the Screening of Salmonella spp./Shigella spp.

article

Antibiotic Dereplication Using the Antibiotic Resistance Platform

article

Visualization of Bacterial Resistance using Fluorescent Antibiotic Probes

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2024 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati