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A bacteriophage detection tool for viability assessment of Salmonella cells.

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TLDR
This work presents and validates a novel bacteriophage (phage)-based microbial detection tool to detect and assess Salmonella viability and shows the phage selectivity in cell recognition minimizes false-negative and false-positive results often associated with most detection methods.
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This article is published in Biosensors and Bioelectronics.The article was published on 2014-02-15 and is currently open access. It has received 90 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Bacteriophage.

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Current Perspectives on Viable but Non-Culturable (VBNC) Pathogenic Bacteria.

TL;DR: Various aspects of VBNC bacteria are described, which include their proteomic and genetic profiles under the VB NC state, conditions of resuscitation, methods of detection, antibiotic resistance, and observations on Rpf.
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Genetically Engineered Phages: a Review of Advances over the Last Decade

TL;DR: This review highlights advances in techniques used to engineer phages as vehicles for drug delivery and vaccines, as well as for the assembly of new materials, and discusses existing challenges and opportunities.
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The viable but non-culturable state and its relevance in food safety

TL;DR: This review provides an overview of the biology of the VB NC state, its relationship to food safety, and novel methods developed for the rapid detection and identification of VBNC cells.
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Bacterial biosensing: Recent advances in phage-based bioassays and biosensors.

TL;DR: The importance of electrochemical biosensors as simple, reliable, cost-effective, and accurate tools for bacterial detection is emphasized, as well as the most recent advancements in phage-based sensing assays and sensors.
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Ligands for label-free detection of whole bacteria on biosensors: A review

TL;DR: This review proposes to gather and comment different ligands used for the detection of whole cell bacteria and label-free methods, which enable the user to skip sampling processing steps and decrease the overall test cost.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biosensors for detection of pathogenic bacteria

TL;DR: An overview of different physicochemical instrumental techniques for direct and indirect identification of bacteria such as: infrared and fluorescence spectroscopy, flow cytometry, chromatography and chemiluminescence techniques as a basis for biosensor construction is presented.
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Assessment and interpretation of bacterial viability by using the LIVE/DEAD BacLight Kit in combination with flow cytometry.

TL;DR: It is shown here that the application of propidium iodide in combination with a green fluorescent total nucleic acid stain on UVA-irradiated cells of Escherichia coli, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, Shigella flexneri, and a community of freshwater bacteria resulted in a clear and distinctive flow cytometric staining pattern.
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Analysis of bacterial function by multi-colour fluorescence flow cytometry and single cell sorting.

TL;DR: Analysis of bacterial fermentations showed a considerable drop in membrane potential and integrity during the latter stages of small scale (5L), well mixed fed-batch fermentations, suggesting 'on-line' flow cytometry could improve process control.
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Molecular methods for the assessment of bacterial viability.

TL;DR: This review assesses the molecular methods currently available and evaluates their ability to assess cell viability with emphasis on environmental pathogens and offers speed, sensitivity and specificity.
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Q1. What have the authors contributed in "A bacteriophage detection tool for viability assessment of salmonella cells" ?

This work presents and validates a novel bacteriophage ( phage ) -based microbial detection tool to detect and assess Salmonella viability. This ability was confirmed for immobilized phages on gold surfaces, where the phage detection signal follows the same trend of the concentration of viable plus VBNC cells in the sample. Salmonella Enteritidis cells in a VBNC physiological state were evaluated by cell culture, flow-cytometry and epifluorescence microscopy, and further assayed with a biosensor platform.