Sensors (Dec 2024)

Concentration vs. Optical Density of ESKAPEE Bacteria: A Method to Determine the Optimum Measurement Wavelength

  • Bruno Wacogne,
  • Marine Belinger Podevin,
  • Naïs Vaccari,
  • Claudia Koubevi,
  • Céline Codjiová,
  • Emilie Gutierrez,
  • Lucie Davoine,
  • Marjorie Robert-Nicoud,
  • Alain Rouleau,
  • Annie Frelet-Barrand

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s24248160
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 24
p. 8160

Abstract

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Optical density measurement has been used for decades to determine the microorganism concentration and more rarely for mammalian cells. Although this measurement can be carried out at any wavelength, studies report a limited number of measurement wavelengths, mainly around 600 nm, and no consensus seems to be emerging to propose an objective method for determining the optimum measurement wavelength for each microorganism. In this article, we propose a method for analyzing the absorbance spectra of ESKAPEE bacteria and determining the optimum measurement wavelength for each of them. The method is based on the analysis of the signal-to-noise ratio of the relationships between concentrations and optical densities when the measurement wavelength varies over the entire spectral range of the absorbance spectra measured for each bacterium. These optimum wavelengths range from 612 nm for Enterococcus faecium to 705 nm for Acinetobacter baumannii. The method can be directly applied to any bacteria, any culture method, and also to any biochemical substance with an absorbance spectrum without any particular feature such as an identified maximum.

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