Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dieter M. Tourlousse is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dieter M. Tourlousse.


Lab on a Chip | 2012

Gene-Z: a device for point of care genetic testing using a smartphone

Robert D. Stedtfeld; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Gregoire Seyrig; Tiffany M. Stedtfeld; Maggie Kronlein; Scott Price; Farhan Ahmad; Erdogan Gulari; James M. Tiedje; Syed A. Hashsham

By 2012, point of care (POC) testing will constitute roughly one third of the


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Development and experimental validation of a predictive threshold cycle equation for quantification of virulence and marker genes by high-throughput nanoliter-volume PCR on the OpenArray platform.

Robert D. Stedtfeld; Samuel W. Baushke; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Sarah M. Miller; Tiffany M. Stedtfeld; Erdogan Gulari; James M. Tiedje; Syed A. Hashsham

59 billion in vitro diagnostics market. The ability to carry out multiplexed genetic testing and wireless connectivity are emerging as key attributes of future POC devices. In this study, an inexpensive, user-friendly and compact device (termed Gene-Z) is presented for rapid quantitative detection of multiple genetic markers with high sensitivity and specificity. Using a disposable valve-less polymer microfluidic chip containing four arrays of 15 reaction wells each with dehydrated primers for isothermal amplification, the Gene-Z enables simultaneous analysis of four samples, each for multiple genetic markers in parallel, requiring only a single pipetting step per sample for dispensing. To drastically reduce the cost and size of the real-time detector necessary for quantification, loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) was performed with a high concentration of SYTO-81, a non-inhibiting fluorescent DNA binding dye. The Gene-Z is operated using an iPod Touch, which also receives data and carries out automated analysis and reporting via a WiFi interface. This study presents data pertaining to performance of the device including sensitivity and reproducibility using genomic DNA from Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. Overall, the Gene-Z represents a significant step toward truly inexpensive and compact tools for POC genetic testing.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

In Situ-Synthesized Virulence and Marker Gene Biochip for Detection of Bacterial Pathogens in Water†

Sarah M. Miller; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Robert D. Stedtfeld; Samuel W. Baushke; Amanda B. Herzog; Lukas M. Wick; Jean Marie Rouillard; Erdogan Gulari; James M. Tiedje; Syed A. Hashsham

ABSTRACT Development of quantitative PCR (QPCR) assays typically requires extensive screening within and across a given species to ensure specific detection and lucid identification among various pathogenic and nonpathogenic strains and to generate standard curves. To minimize screening requirements, multiple virulence and marker genes (VMGs) were targeted simultaneously to enhance reliability, and a predictive threshold cycle (CT) equation was developed to calculate the number of starting copies based on an experimental CT. The empirical equation was developed with Sybr green detection in nanoliter-volume QPCR chambers (OpenArray) and tested with 220 previously unvalidated primer pairs targeting 200 VMGs from 30 pathogens. A high correlation (R2 = 0.816) was observed between the predicted and experimental CTs based on the organisms genome size, guanine and cytosine (GC) content, amplicon length, and stability of the primers 3′ end. The performance of the predictive CT equation was tested using 36 validation samples consisting of pathogenic organisms spiked into genomic DNA extracted from three environmental waters. In addition, the primer success rate was dependent on the GC content of the target organisms and primer sequences. Targeting multiple assays per organism and using the predictive CT equation are expected to reduce the extent of the validation necessary when developing QPCR arrays for a large number of pathogens or other targets.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Influence of Dangling Ends and Surface-Proximal Tails of Targets on Probe-Target Duplex Formation in 16S rRNA Gene-Based Diagnostic Arrays

Robert D. Stedtfeld; Lukas M. Wick; Samuel W. Baushke; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Amanda B. Herzog; Yongmei Xia; Jean Marie Rouillard; Joel A. Klappenbach; James R. Cole; Erdogan Gulari; James M. Tiedje; Syed A. Hashsham

ABSTRACT Pathogen detection tools with high reliability are needed for various applications, including food and water safety and clinical diagnostics. In this study, we designed and validated an in situ-synthesized biochip for detection of 12 microbial pathogens, including a suite of pathogens relevant to water safety. To enhance the reliability of presence/absence calls, probes were designed for multiple virulence and marker genes (VMGs) of each pathogen, and each VMG was targeted by an average of 17 probes. Hybridization of the biochip with amplicon mixtures demonstrated that 95% of the initially designed probes behaved as predicted in terms of positive/negative signals. The probes were further validated using DNA obtained from three different types of water samples and spiked with pathogen genomic DNA at decreasing relative abundance. Excellent specificity for making presence/absence calls was observed by using a cutoff of 0.5 for the positive fraction (i.e., the fraction of probes yielding a positive signal for a given VMG). A split multiplex PCR design for simultaneous amplification of the VMGs resulted in a detection limit of between 0.1 and 0.01% relative abundance, depending on the type of pathogen and the VMG. Thermodynamic analysis of the hybridization patterns obtained with DNA from the different water samples demonstrated that probes with a hybridization Gibbs free energy of approximately −19.3 kcal/mol provided the best trade-off between sensitivity and specificity. The developed biochip may be used to detect the described bacterial pathogens in water samples when parallel and specific detection is required.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2015

Selection of fluorescent DNA dyes for real-time LAMP with portable and simple optics

Gregoire Seyrig; Robert D. Stedtfeld; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Farhan Ahmad; Keara Towery; Alison M. Cupples; James M. Tiedje; Syed A. Hashsham

ABSTRACT Dangling ends and surface-proximal tails of gene targets influence probe-target duplex formation and affect the signal intensity of probes on diagnostic microarrays. This phenomenon was evaluated using an oligonucleotide microarray containing 18-mer probes corresponding to the 16S rRNA genes of 10 waterborne pathogens and a number of synthetic and PCR-amplified gene targets. Signal intensities for Klenow/random primer-labeled 16S rRNA gene targets were dissimilar from those for 45-mer synthetic targets for nearly 73% of the probes tested. Klenow/random primer-labeled targets resulted in an interaction with a complex mixture of 16S rRNA genes (used as the background) 3.7 times higher than the interaction of 45-mer targets with the same mixture. A 7-base-long dangling end sequence with perfect homology to another single-stranded background DNA sequence was sufficient to produce a cross-hybridization signal that was as strong as the signal obtained by the probe-target duplex itself. Gibbs free energy between the target and a well-defined background was found to be a better indicator of hybridization signal intensity than the sequence or length of the dangling end alone. The dangling end (Gibbs free energy of −7.6 kcal/mol) was found to be significantly more prone to target-background interaction than the surface-proximal tail (Gibbs free energy of− 64.5 kcal/mol). This study underlines the need for careful target preparation and evaluation of signal intensities for diagnostic arrays using 16S rRNA and other gene targets due to the potential for target interaction with a complex background.


Water Environment Research | 2007

Virulence factor activity relationships: Challenges and development approaches

Dieter M. Tourlousse; Robert D. Stedtfeld; Samuel W. Baushke; Lukas M. Wick; Syed A. Hashsham

Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is increasingly used for point-of-care nucleic acid based diagnostics. LAMP can be monitored in real-time by measuring the increase in fluorescence of DNA binding dyes. However, there is little information comparing the effect of various fluorescent dyes on signal to noise ratio (SNR) or threshold time (Tt). This information is critical for implementation with field deployable diagnostic tools that require small, low power consumption, robust, and inexpensive optical components with reagent saving low volume reactions. In this study, SNR and Tt during real-time LAMP was evaluated with eleven fluorescent dyes. Of all dyes tested, SYTO-82, SYTO-84, and SYTOX Orange resulted in the shortest Tt, and SYTO-81 had the widest range of working concentrations. The optimized protocol detected 10 genome copies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in less than 10 min, 10 copies of Giardia intestinalis in ~20 min, and 10 copies of Staphylococcus aureus or Salmonella enterica in less than 15 min. Results demonstrate that reaction efficiency depends on both dye type and concentration and the selected polymerase. The optimized protocol was evaluated in the Gene-Z™ device, a hand-held battery operated platform characterized via simple and low cost optics, and a multiple assay microfluidic chip with micron volume reaction wells. Compared to the more conventional intercalating dye (SYBR Green), reliable amplification was only observed in the Gene-Z™ when using higher concentrations of SYTO-81.


Water Environment Research | 2007

Multiplex approach for screening genetic markers of microbial indicators

Robert D. Stedtfeld; Sam W. Baushke; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Benli Chai; James R. Cole; Syed A. Hashsham

Virulence factor activity relationships (VFAR) is a predictive approach proposed by the National Research Councils Committee on Drinking Water Contaminants (Washington, D.C.) to classify and rank waterborne pathogens. It is based on the presumption that health threats of waterborne pathogens can be predicted from descriptors at different levels of cellular organization. This paper summarizes challenges that need to be addressed while developing VFAR, with a focus on genomics, such as genomic variability among related pathogens and the need to incorporate genetic descriptors for persistence and host susceptibility. Three key components of VFAR development and validation are also presented, including (1) compilation of a comprehensive VFAR database, (2) development of predictive mathematical models relating descriptors to health effects and other microbial responses, and (3) high-throughput molecular monitoring of drinking water supplies and sources. Bayesian approach and on-chip polymerase chain reaction are discussed as examples of mathematical models and molecular monitoring.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2017

Diagnostic microarray for 14 water and foodborne pathogens using a flatbed scanner

Vidya Srinivasan; Robert D. Stedtfeld; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Samuel W. Baushke; Yu Xin; Sarah M. Miller; Trinh Pham; Jean Marie Rouillard; Erdogan Gulari; James M. Tiedje; Syed A. Hashsham

Genetic markers are expected to provide better specificity in epidemiological studies and potentially serve as better indicators of waterborne pathogens. Methods used to assess genetic markers of emerging microbial indicators include pulsed field gel electrophoresis, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and microarrays. This paper outlines a high-throughput approach to screen for such genetic markers using a set of theoretical and experimental screening tools. The theoretical screening involves evaluating genes related to the ribosomal RNA and specific functions from emerging indicator groups, followed by experimental validation with appropriate sampling schemes and high-throughput and economical screening methods, such as microarrays, real time PCR, and on-chip PCR. Analysis of a wide range of samples covering temporal variability in location, host, and waterborne disease outbreaks is essential. The proposed approach is expected to shorten the time and cost associated with searching for new genetic markers of emerging indicators by at least 10-fold.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2012

Identification of non-specific hybridization using an empirical equation fitted to non-equilibrium dissociation curves

Samuel W. Baushke; Robert D. Stedtfeld; Dieter M. Tourlousse; Farhan Ahmad; Lukas M. Wick; Erdogan Gulari; James M. Tiedje; Syed A. Hashsham

Parallel detection approaches are of interest to many researchers interested in identifying multiple water and foodborne pathogens simultaneously. Availability and cost-effectiveness are two key factors determining the usefulness of such approaches for laboratories with limited resources. In this study, we developed and validated a high-density microarray for simultaneous screening of 14 bacterial pathogens using an approach that employs gold labeling with silver enhancement (GLS) protocol. In total, 8887 probes (50-mer) were designed using an in-house database of virulence and marker genes (VMGs), and synthesized in quadruplicate on glass slides using an in-situ synthesis technology. Target VMG amplicons were obtained using multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR), labeled with biotin, and hybridized to the microarray. The signals generated after gold deposition and silver enhancement, were quantified using a flatbed scanner having 2-μm resolution. Data analysis indicated that reliable presence/absence calls could be made, if: i) over four probes were used per gene, ii) the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) cutoff was greater than or equal to two, and iii) the positive fraction (PF), i.e., number of probes with SNR≥2 for a given VMG was greater than 0.75. Hybridization of the array with blind samples resulted in 100% correct calls, and no false positive. Because amplicons were obtained by multiplex PCR, sensitivity of this method is similar to PCR. This assay is an inexpensive and reliable technique for high throughput screening of multiple pathogens.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2013

Tropical agricultural land management influences on soil microbial communities through its effect on soil organic carbon

Woo Jun Sul; Stella Asuming-Brempong; Qiong Wang; Dieter M. Tourlousse; C. Ryan Penton; Ye Deng; Jorge L. M. Rodrigues; Samuel Adiku; James W. Jones; Jizhong Zhou; James R. Cole; James M. Tiedje

Non-equilibrium dissociation curves (NEDCs) have the potential to identify non-specific hybridizations on high throughput, diagnostic microarrays. We report a simple method for the identification of non-specific signals by using a new parameter that does not rely on comparison of perfect match and mismatch dissociations. The parameter is the ratio of specific dissociation temperature (T(d-w)) to theoretical melting temperature (T(m)) and can be obtained by automated fitting of a four-parameter, sigmoid, empirical equation to the thousands of curves generated in a typical experiment. The curves fit perfect match NEDCs from an initial experiment with an R(2) of 0.998±0.006 and root mean square of 108±91 fluorescent units. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed low temperature hybridization signals (20-48°C) to be as effective as area under the curve as primary data filters. Evaluation of three datasets that target 16S rRNA and functional genes with varying degrees of target sequence similarity showed that filtering out hybridizations with T(d-w)/T(m)<0.78 greatly reduced false positive results. In conclusion, T(d-w)/T(m) successfully screened many non-specific hybridizations that could not be identified using single temperature signal intensities alone, while the empirical modeling allowed a simplified approach to the high throughput analysis of thousands of NEDCs.

Collaboration


Dive into the Dieter M. Tourlousse's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James M. Tiedje

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Farhan Ahmad

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gregoire Seyrig

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lukas M. Wick

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James R. Cole

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge