Microbio - Germ identification by PCR
Contamination investigations collapse without definitive organism identification - knowing you have a problem proves worthless when you cannot determine its source, predict its spread, or target effective corrective actions. Microbial identification by PCR using 16S and 18S rRNA gene sequencing delivers definitive species-level identification essential when contamination investigations, outbreak tracking, or regulatory submissions demand unambiguous organism characterization beyond conventional methods. This molecular approach sequences the genetic fingerprint of bacteria and fungi, providing identification accuracy exceeding 95% even for fastidious organisms that grow poorly or atypically in culture-based systems. When bioburden isolates, environmental contaminants, or sterility test failures require investigation, PCR identification establishes whether organisms originate from water systems, personnel, raw materials, or environmental sources, guiding targeted corrective actions that address contamination root causes. The methodology proves invaluable for organisms that traditional biochemical methods struggle to identify - slow-growing actinomycetes, nutritionally variant streptococci, or organisms with ambiguous biochemical profiles that yield inconclusive Vitek or MALDI-TOF results. Regulatory authorities increasingly request molecular identification during contamination investigations and facility inspections, expecting manufacturers to definitively characterize organisms found in critical areas or sterile products. For medical device manufacturers tracking persistent environmental isolates, PCR sequencing distinguishes between recurring contamination from a single source versus independent contamination events, informing remediation strategies. Pharmaceutical facilities use molecular identification to verify that cleaning validation effectively eliminates specific organisms or to demonstrate that bioburden consists of expected environmental flora rather than concerning pathogens.