Transcript Document
Culturing of Bacteria
Major Contributions in Microbiology
Media and Culture
Media:
Nutrients (agar, pH indicators, proteins and
carbohydrates) used to grow organisms outside of
their natural habitats
Culture:
The propagation of microorganisms using various
media
Culture Media: Used to grow bacteria and it can be used to:
Enrich the numbers of bacteria
Select for certain bacteria and suppress others
Differentiate among different kinds of bacteria
Culture and Medium
Culture is the term given to microorganisms that are cultivated in
the lab for the purpose of identifying and studying them
Pure culture
Mixed culture
Medium is the term given to the combination of ingredients that
will support the growth and cultivation of microorganisms by
providing all the essential nutrients required for the growth that is
multiplication, in order to cultivate these microorganisms in large
numbers to study them
Classification of Culture Media
Media can be classified according to their properties:
1- according to physical state into solid, semi-solid, broth
a) Liquid
- Peptone water, Nutrient broth
b) Semisolid - Nutrient agar, stabs
c) Solid
- Blood agar, Serum agar (Figs-1, 2, 3 and 4)
2- According to chemical composition into
a) Natural (Empirical) media
• don’t have any addition of specific nutrients e.g. milk,
vegetable juices, diluted blood. It is called empirical
because the exact chemical composition of the constituents
is not exactly known
Fig 1
Culture Media( physically)
.
Solid
Semi Solid
adding small amounts of agar to fluid
And mainly used as transport media or in motility tests.
Liquid (broth)
Fig 2
Nutrient Broth
Nutrient Agar
Fig 3
Solid Culture
Media
Petri dish
Slant
Stab (Deep)
Fig 4
Slant
Solid
Stab
b) Semi-Synthetic Media
It is one in which the chemical composition of the medium is
•
partially known, in other words the medium has natural
component (unknown chemical composition) and
•
certain specific nutrients (known chemical composition)
e.g. potato-dextrose agar
c) Synthetic Media (chemically defined media)
One in which all chemical ingredients of known composition
are mixed in definite proportions
d) Living Media
A living media consists of living cells or tissues which are used
for the culture of strictly parasitic organisms like viruses or
rickettsiae which can not be cultured on a non living medium
3- According to functional type general purpose in to selective,
enriched, enrichment
4- Based on oxygen requirement:
• Aerobic medium
• Anaerobic medium
Basic requirements of culture media
Nutrients
- Energy source
- Carbon source
- Nitrogen source
Mineral salts – Sulphate, phosphates, chlorides and carbonates
of K, Mg and Ca
A suitable pH about 7.2 – 7.4
Accessory growth factors
- Tryptophan for Salmonella typhi
Water
Many of the ingredients used in culture media are of natural origin,
the most important are:
Beef extract
Peptones
Yeast extract
Gelatin
Agar
Agar – Agar
Complex polysaccharide
Used as solidifying agent for
culture media in Petri plates,
slants, and deeps
Generally not metabolized by
microbes
Liquefies at 98°C
Solidifies ~42°C
Added to culture media in a
concentration of 1.2% to 2% to
render it solid
Peptone:
Water soluble protein (milk, meat, soya)spray dried
product obtained from hydrolysis(acid, enzyme
e.g. papin, pepsin, trypsin)
Meat extract:
Concentrated aqueous infusion of fresh beef
Mineral salts:
Sulphate, phosphate, iron
Carbohydrate
provides the microorganisms with carbon which is
the source of energy
Water deionized
OR
Distilled water
free from chemicals that can suppress the growth of
microorganisms
c. Streak plate method
Direct Measurement of Microbial Growth
A standard plate count reflects the number of viable microbes and
assumes that each bacterium grows into a single colony. Because
it is impossible to say that each colony actually arose from an
individual cell (cells clump, fact of life) plate counts are reported
as the number of colony-forming units (CFU) instead of the
number of cells
If the concentration of bacteria is too great the colonies will grow
into each other and the plate will be uncountable
To insure a countable plate a series of dilutions should be
plated. The serial dilutions should give at least one countable
plate in the series (25-250 or 30-300, depending on preference of
the individual lab)
In a direct microscopic count, the microbes in a measured volume
of a bacterial suspension are counted with the use of a specially
designed slide - Hemocytometer
Estimating Bacterial Numbers by Indirect Methods
A spectrophotometer is used to determine turbidity i.e. cloudiness
by measuring the amount of light that passed through a suspension
of cells - Fig
More cells = more turbidity; more turbidity = less light passing
through the suspension
%T is percent transmission - fewer cells present (less turbidity) will
allow more light to pass through, the %T is higher when the cell
number is lower
Absorbance is the opposite of %T. More light is absorbed when
more cells are present - some people like this measure better
because absorbance goes up as turbidity or cell number goes up
After counting the cells in all 4 corner-squares, divide by 4 to get
the average number of cells per 1 mm2 cell area. Multiply this
number by 1x104 to obtain the average number of cells per ml