Publication detail

Curve fitting in Fourier transform near infrared spectroscopy used for the analysis of bacterial cells

DREXLER, P. KŘEPELKA, P. PYTEL, R. HYNŠTOVÁ, I. PÉREZ-RODRÍGUEZ, F. ROGER, J.

Original Title

Curve fitting in Fourier transform near infrared spectroscopy used for the analysis of bacterial cells

Type

journal article in Web of Science

Language

English

Original Abstract

Infrared spectroscopy is a prominent molecular technique for bacterial analysis. Within its context, Near infrared (NIR) spectroscopy in particular brings benefits over other vibrational approaches; these advantages include, for example, lower sensitivity to water, high penetration depth, and low cost. However, NIR spectroscopy is not popular within microbiology, because the spectra of organic samples are difficult to interpret. We propose a comparison of spectral curve fitting methods, namely, techniques that facilitate the interpretation of most peaks, simplify the spectra, and improve the prediction of bacterial species from the relevant NIR spectra. The performances of three common curve fitting algorithms and the technique based on differential evolution were compared via a synthesized experimental spectrum. Utilizing the obtained results, the spectra of three different bacterial species were curve-fit by optimized algorithm. The proposed algorithm decomposed the spectra to specific absorption peaks, whose parameters were estimated via the Differential Evolution approach initialized through Levenberg-Marquardt optimization; subsequently, the spectra were classified with conventional procedures and using the parameters of the revealed peaks. On a limited dataset, the correct classification rate computed by PLS-DA was 95 %. When we employed the peak parameters for the classification, the rate corresponded to 91.7 %. According to the Gaussian formula , the parameters comprise the spectral peak position, amplitude, and width. The most important peaks for bacterial discrimination were identified by ANOVA and interpreted as N-H stretching bonds in proteins, cis bonds, and CH2 absorption in fatty acids. We examined some aspects of the behavior of standard curve fitting algorithms and proposed differential evolution to optimize the fitting process. Based on the correct use of these algorithms, the NIR spectra of bacteria can be interpreted and the full potential of NIR spectroscopy in microbiology exploited.

Keywords

Bacterial identification; classification; near infrared; spectroscopy; spectral decomposition; curve fitting; microbiology

Authors

DREXLER, P.; KŘEPELKA, P.; PYTEL, R.; HYNŠTOVÁ, I.; PÉREZ-RODRÍGUEZ, F.; ROGER, J.

Released

2. 5. 2017

Publisher

SAGE Journals

ISBN

0967-0335

Periodical

JOURNAL OF NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY

Year of study

25

Number

3

State

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Pages from

151

Pages to

164

Pages count

14

BibTex

@article{BUT138990,
  author="Petr {Drexler} and Pavel {Křepelka} and Roman {Pytel} and Iveta {Hynštová} and Fernando {Pérez-Rodríguez} and jean-michel {roger}",
  title="Curve fitting in Fourier transform near infrared spectroscopy used for the analysis of bacterial cells",
  journal="JOURNAL OF NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY",
  year="2017",
  volume="25",
  number="3",
  pages="151--164",
  doi="10.1177/0967033517705032",
  issn="0967-0335"
}