Cover image for Quantifying Environmental Microorganisms and Viruses Using qPCR
Quantifying Environmental Microorganisms and Viruses Using qPCR
Title:
Quantifying Environmental Microorganisms and Viruses Using qPCR
Author:
Pepper, Ian
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Cambridge, MA MyJoVE Corp 2016
Physical Description:
online resource (597 seconds)
Series:
Science Education: Environmental Microbiology
General Note:
Title from resource description page
Abstract:
Source: Laboratories of Dr. Ian Pepper and Dr. Charles Gerba - The University of Arizona Demonstrating Author: Bradley Schmitz Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), also known as real-time PCR, is a widely-used molecular technique for enumerating microorganisms in the environment. Prior to this approach, quantifying microorganisms was limited largely to classical culture-based techniques. However, the culturing of microbes from environmental samples can be particularly challenging, and it is generally held that as few as 1 to 10% of the microorganisms present within environmental samples are detectable using these techniques. The advent of qPCR in environmental microbiology research has therefore advanced the field greatly by allowing for more accurate determination of concentrations of microorganisms such as disease-causing pathogens in environmental samples. However, an important limitation of qPCR as an applied microbiological technique is that living, viable populations cannot be differentiated from inactive or non-living populations. This video demonstrates the use of qPCR to detect pepper mild mottle virus from an environmental water sample.
Reading Level:
For undergraduate, graduate, and professional students
Electronic Access:
https://www.jove.com/t/10186
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