1st Edition

Identifying Microbes by Mass Spectrometry Proteomics

Edited By Charles H. Wick Copyright 2014
    290 Pages 98 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    289 Pages 98 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    All microbes, including bacteria, viruses, and fungi, can be classified and identified by matching a few peptides known to be unique to each organism. Identifying Microbes by Mass Spectrometry Proteomics describes ways to identify microorganisms using powerful new techniques combining hardware and software and yielding highly accurate methods for detection, identification, and classification of microbes. This straightforward technology can be used to detect unknown and unsequenced microorganisms as well as microbes in complex environmental samples.

    This book reviews various mass analyzers used for detection and describes ionization methods frequently used for analysis of microbial constituents, a necessary step in the preparation of mass spectrometry (MS) samples. The text also discusses diverse processing methods, which are used to analyze MS files for matching mass spectral profiles, and examines protein and nucleic acid sequence-based methods capable of classification and identification of microbial agents. The book also covers sample collection methods and specific sample preparation techniques.

    The text addresses using computer software and bioinformatics approaches for data mining to discriminate microbes using mass spectrometry proteomics (MSP). It also discusses historical pattern recognition-based methods and other approaches such as analysis of pyrolysis products, chemical ionization (CI) of fatty acid methyl esters, and MALDI-MS. The text contains examples of the application of the MSP technique for microbe detection and includes a survey of suitable and commercially available MS-based platforms. Successful applications include the identification of unknown microbes in honey bees associated with colony collapse disorder and the analysis of virus strains from the 2009 influenza pandemic. The final chapter outlines future trends in these groundbreaking uses of MS techniques, which are fast, not limited by sample type, and show potential in answering complex environmental questions.

    Detection and Identification of Microbes Using Mass Spectrometry Proteomics
    Charles H. Wick

    Mass Analyzers and MS/MS Methods for Microbial Detection and Identification
    Michael F. Stanford

    Matching Mass Spectral Profiles of Biomarkers
    Michael F. Stanford

    Sequence Information Derived from Proteins or Nucleic Acids
    Samir V. Deshpande

    Collection and Processing of Microbial Samples
    Samir V. Deshpande

    Computer Software Used for Chemometric and Bioinformatics to Discriminate Microbes
    Samir V. Deshpande

    Applications
    Charles H. Wick

    Survey of Commercially Available MS-Based Platforms Suitable for Bacterial Detection and Identification
    Michael F. Stanford

    Current and Future Trends in Using MS for Microbial Detection and Identification
    Charles H. Wick

    References
    Index

    Biography

    Dr. Charles H. Wick, Ph.D., is a retired senior scientist from the U.S. Army Edgewood Chemical Biological Center, where he has served both as a manager and research physical scientist and has made significant contributions to forensic science. Although his 40-year professional career has spanned both the public sector and the military, his better-known work in the area of forensic science has occurred in concert with the Department of Defense. Throughout his career, Dr. Wick has made lasting and important contributions to forensic science and to the field of antiterrorism. He holds several U.S. patents in the area of microbe detection and classification. He has written more than 45 civilian and military publications and has received myriad awards and citations.