Muhammedin Deliorman
Montana State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Muhammedin Deliorman.
Langmuir | 2009
Zhiyong Suo; Recep Avci; Muhammedin Deliorman; Xinghong Yang; David W. Pascual
A bacterial cell wall is a highly dynamic multilayer structure interfacing the cytoplasm to the outside environment. It supports a multitude of chemical and biological processes necessary for life. It is therefore postulated that damage to the structure of bacterial cell wall would threaten cell integrity and result in cell death. We tested this hypothesis by repeatedly puncturing the cell wall of a live Gram negative bacterium Salmonella typhimurium at different locations using a sharp atomic force microscope nanotip and conducting multiple viability tests. Our study demonstrated that a S. typhimurium survives repeated puncturings of its cell wall and retains its integrity, viability, and ability to divide. The results are explained on the basis of the concept of the self-repairing of lipid bilayers and the peptidoglycan layer.
Analytical Chemistry | 2009
Zhiyong Suo; Xinghong Yang; Recep Avci; Muhammedin Deliorman; Paul Rugheimer; David W. Pascual; Y. U. Idzerda
We report a comparative study of the efficacy of immobilizing living bacteria by means of seven antibodies against bacterial surface antigens associated with Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium. The targeted bacterial antigens were CFA/I fimbriae, flagella, lipopolysaccharides (LPS), and capsular F1 antigen. The best immobilization of S. Typhimurium was achieved with the antibody against CFA/I fimbriae. The immobilization of bacteria using antiflagellin showed significant enhancement if the flagella rotary motion was paralyzed. Of the four antibodies targeting LPS structures, only one, the antibody against the O-antigen polysaccharides, showed a relatively efficient bacterial immobilization. No bacterial immobilization was achieved using the antibody against F1 antigen, presumably because F1 protein can detach from the bacterial surface easily. The results suggest that an antibody for bacterial immunoimmobilization should target a surface antigen which extends out from the bacterial surface and is tightly attached to the bacterial cell wall. The microarrays of living S. Typhimurium cells immobilized in this manner remained viable and effective for at least 2 weeks in growth medium before a thick biofilm covered the whole surface.
Langmuir | 2012
Zhiyong Suo; Xinghong Yang; Muhammedin Deliorman; Ling Cao; Recep Avci
Capturing pathogens on a sensor surface is one of the most important steps in the design of a biosensor. The efficiency of a biosensor at capturing pathogens has direct bearing on its sensitivity. In this work we investigated the capturing of Escherichia coli on substrates modified with antibodies targeting different types of fimbriae: K88ab (F4), K88ac (F4), K99 (F5), 987P (F6), F41, and CFA/I. The results suggest that all these fimbriae can be used for the efficient immobilization of living E. coli cells. The immobilization efficiency was affected by the purity and clone type of the antibody and the fimbriae expression level of the bacteria. For a specific fimbriae type, a higher immobilization efficiency was often observed with the monoclonal antibodies. Immunoimmobilization was utilized in an antibody microarray immersed in a mixed culture of pathogens to demonstrate the rapid and simultaneous label-free detection of multiple pathogens within less than 1 h using a single test. The capture rate of living pathogens exceeds a single bacterium per 100 × 100 μm(2) area per 0.5 h of incubation for a bulk concentration of 10(5) cfu/mL.
Physical Biology | 2012
Ling Cao; Zhiyong Suo; Timothy Lim; SangMu Jun; Muhammedin Deliorman; Carol Riccardi; Laura Kellerman; Recep Avci; Xinghong Yang
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli CFA/I is a protective antigen and has been overexpressed in bacterial vectors, such as Salmonella Typhimurium H683, to generate vaccines. Effects that overexpressed CFA/I may engender on the bacterial host remain largely unexplored. To investigate, we constructed a high CFA/I expression strain, H683-pC2, and compared it to a low CFA/I expression strain, H683-pC, and to a non-CFA/I expression strain, H683-pY. The results showed that H683-pC2 was less able to migrate into semisolid agar (0.35%) than either H683-pC or H683-pY. Bacteria that migrated showed motility halo sizes of H683-pC2 < H683-pC < H683-pY. In the liquid culture media, H683-pC2 cells precipitated to the bottom of the tube, while those of H683-pY did not. In situ imaging revealed that H683-pC2 bacilli tended to auto-agglutinate within the semisolid agar, while H683-pY bacilli did not. When the cfaBE fimbrial fiber encoding genes were deleted from pC2, the new plasmid, pC2(-), significantly recovered bacterial swimming capability. Our study highlights the negative impact of overexpressed CFA/I fimbriae on bacterial swimming motility.
Astrobiology | 2007
Zhiyong Suo; Recep Avci; Mary H. Schweitzer; Muhammedin Deliorman
Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research | 2013
Gary S. Groenewold; Recep Avci; Robert V. Fox; Muhammedin Deliorman; Zhiyong Suo; Laura Kellerman
Surface and Interface Analysis | 2009
Gary S. Groenewold; Gary L. Gresham; Recep Avci; Muhammedin Deliorman
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 2013
Gary S. Groenewold; W. Roger Cannon; Paul A. Lessing; Recep Avci; Muhammedin Deliorman; Mark L. Wolfenden; Doug W. Akers; J. Keith Jewell; Larry D. Zuck
Archive | 2012
Zhiyong Suo; Muhammedin Deliorman; Sukriye Celikkol; Xinghong Yang; Recep Avci
Surface and Interface Analysis | 2007
Gary S. Groenewold; Marnie Cortez; Anita K. Gianotto; Garold L. Gresham; John E. Olson; Robert V. Fox; Byron M. White; William F. Bauer; Recep Avci; Muhammedin Deliorman; Eric Williams