6.1 Microbial techniques Flashcards
- This does not include aseptic technique
What is provided in a culture?
Correct nutrients, oxygen, pH, temperature
What is aseptic technique?
Only introducing the desired bacteria into the medium, under sterile conditions to prevent the growth of unwanted organisms
Factors to consider when culturing a microbe
- Even a harmless microbe has a risk of a harmful mutant strain
- Contamination from the air or your skin
Describe 3 types of culture
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
Describe a cell count as a method of measuring growth
- 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
Benefits of cell counting
Useful and only counts viable cells
Problems with cell counting
Slow and equipment is expensive
Describe turbidimetry
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
Benefits of turbimetry
Quick and can be conducted in the field
Problems with turbimetry
Expensive, easily affected by other variables, counts non-viable cells, assumes that density is equal across the culture
Describe dilution plating
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
Benefits of dilution plating
- Doesn’t require complex or expensive equipment
- Only counts viable cells and obtains a direct cell count
Problems with dilution plating
Slow because it requires an incubation period and serial dilutions are required
What are the phases of bacterial growth
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