6.1 Microbial techniques Flashcards

- This does not include aseptic technique

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1
Q

What is provided in a culture?

A

Correct nutrients, oxygen, pH, temperature

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2
Q

What is aseptic technique?

A

Only introducing the desired bacteria into the medium, under sterile conditions to prevent the growth of unwanted organisms

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3
Q

Factors to consider when culturing a microbe

A
  • Even a harmless microbe has a risk of a harmful mutant strain
  • Contamination from the air or your skin
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4
Q

Describe 3 types of culture

A

Agar plate - nutrient agar, which is a solid medium that acts as a sponge to hold nutrients in a solid block
Selective/differential media - A recipe that discourages the growth of unwanted microbes, relying on the addition or omission of a certain nutrient or include an antibiotic to which the desired bacterium is resistant to
Broth cultures - Nutrients in liquid form

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5
Q

Describe a cell count as a method of measuring growth

A
  • Cells can be counted using a haemocytometer
  • Broth is diluted 1:1 with trypan blue (which stains dead cells)
  • Count the bacterial cells in each of the four sets of 16 squares and take a mean
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6
Q

Benefits of cell counting

A

Useful and only counts viable cells

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7
Q

Problems with cell counting

A

Slow and equipment is expensive

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8
Q

Describe turbidimetry

A

Specialised form of colorimetry
- As turbidity increases, absorbance increases
- By measuring samples with a known cell count and creating a calibration graph the cell count in the unknown sample can be obtained

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9
Q

Benefits of turbimetry

A

Quick and can be conducted in the field

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10
Q

Problems with turbimetry

A

Expensive, easily affected by other variables, counts non-viable cells, assumes that density is equal across the culture

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11
Q

Describe dilution plating

A

Works on the principle that every colony is grown from a single, viable microorganism
- Culture is serially diluted because they are usually a single mass
- A lawn plate is made and the colonies are counted
- This is them multiplied by the dilution factor to obtain a cell count

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12
Q

Benefits of dilution plating

A
  • Doesn’t require complex or expensive equipment
  • Only counts viable cells and obtains a direct cell count
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13
Q

Problems with dilution plating

A

Slow because it requires an incubation period and serial dilutions are required

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14
Q

What are the phases of bacterial growth

A

Lag - adaptation to the environment
Log - maximum rate of growth
Stationary - death rate = reproduction rate due to build up of waste and lack of nutrients
Death - Death rate exceeds as conditions deteriorate

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