What is it about?
This study describes a faster laboratory test to detect an antibiotic-resistance gene (called blaOXA-1) in bacteria. By speeding up the DNA amplification step and using a sensitive CRISPR-Cas-based detection step, the method delivers results in about 50 minutes. In the laboratory, the test could reliably detect the gene in purified bacteria and also in bacteria-spiked poultry feces. This is a promising, faster way to spot one kind of antibiotic‑resistance gene.
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Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash
Why is it important?
The test delivers results far faster than traditional lab methods, allowing clinicians and farmers to learn quickly whether bacteria carry a dangerous resistance gene and to take timely treatment or control measures that can help limit the spread of resistant infections. Because the method uses standard laboratory equipment, it could be adopted more easily in many settings without the need for costly new instruments.
Perspectives
Completed as a supervised undergraduate project, this study is the first peer‑reviewed publication authored by undergraduate students working in my research group and demonstrates their ability to carry a research project from experimental design through data analysis and manuscript preparation; the work reflects the University and School’s commitment to turning motivated students into contributors to publishable science.
Roberto Alcántara
Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Thermal optimized PCR coupled to CRISPR-Cas12a for rapid detection of blaOXA-1 resistance gene, PLOS One, May 2026, PLOS,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0337675.
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