Detail:
Series: Methods in Molecular Biology | Volume: 1508 | Pub. Date: Oct-08-2016 | Page Range: 257-266 | DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-6515-1_14
Year prepared: 2016
Over the past decade, the incidence of life-threatening invasive fungal infections has dramatically increased. Infections caused by hitherto rare and emerging fungal pathogens are associated with significant morbidity and mortality among immunocompromised patients. These observations render the coverage of a broad range of clinically relevant fungal pathogens highly important. The so-called panfungal or, perhaps more correctly, broad-range nucleic acid amplification techniques do not only facilitate sensitive detection of all clinically relevant fungal species but are also rapid and can be applied to analyses of any patient specimens. They have therefore become valuable diagnostic tools for sensitive screening of patients at risk of invasive fungal infections. This chapter summarizes the currently available molecular technologies employed in testing of a wide range of fungal pathogens, and provides a detailed workflow for patient screening by broad-spectrum nucleic acid amplification techniques.
url: Access via Springer ProtocolsLaboratory Protocols
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Title
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Assaying antifungal levels
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Fungal Molecular Biology
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Fungal Molecular Biology
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Detection in clinical samples
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Methods for DNA sequencing
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Using Non-homologous End-Joining-Deficient Strains for Functional Gene Analyses in Filamentous Fungi
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