Cultivation of Bacteria 1
Cultivation of Bacteria 1
Cultivation of Bacteria 1
The study of microorganisms requires being able to grow them in the laboratory. Bacteria are grown in
culture media, which provides the nutrients, necessary for the organisms of interest. There are
different ways to classify the media:
1- Consistency:
Liquid: is called a Broth and it is usually placed in a test tube or a flask.
Solid: Liquid media that has been solidified by the addition of agar (usually 1.5 % w/v) a complex
polysaccharide. The solid media can be placed in Petri dishes (agar plates) or test tubes with a large
surface area (agar slants).
2- Type of media:
Nutrient media: is a specific chemical formulations that contain all the nutrients
and minerals that a many microorganisms needs for normal growth. It is called
defined when the specific nutrients and their amounts are known. An
undefined media is one where the exact composition is not known.
EXERCISE 1:
1) Hold the source culture tube with your non-dominant hand and hold the
inoculating loop with your dominant hand. Carefully shake the culture to make
sure the cells are resuspended
2) Sterilize the inoculator by first passing the entire wire through the flame,
starting at the handle end. Wait until the whole wire becomes red hot. Allow
the wire to cool (without waving it on the air) for about 30 seconds.
3) Remove the cap from the source tube using the pinkie finger of the same hand
that is holding the inoculator. You will hold the cap in your finger until it is time
to put it back on the source tube.
4) Pass the mouth of the source tube through the flame once.
5) Without touching the walls of the tube, put the sterile inoculator into the
source tube containing the culture and dip the loop into the liquid.
(NOTE: If you were using a slant or plate as a source you will simply touch the
surface of the agar where the bacteria are growing with the inoculator. We will do
this in the near future.)
6) Withdraw the inoculator from the source tube, and replace the cap.
7) Remove the cap of the tube to be inoculated (using the pinkie finger as before)
and insert the inoculator into the tube. Don’t stir or shake the loop
excessively. Flame the top of the tube and replace the cap.
. (NOTE: See the specific instructions below for the different types of solid
media.)
8) Flame the inoculator as before but, heat it slowly so that any material
remaining on the loop does not spatter.
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Inoculation of an agar slant:
Rest the inoculator gently at the lower end of the slant and withdraw it slowly
upwards moving it from side to side (the surface of the agar should not be
broken). This should leave a streak on the surface of the slant (In some specific
experiments you may be require to stab the slant just under the agar surface, if
that is the case it will be clearly specified in the instructions).
Fomites are inanimate objects, which carry viable pathogenic organisms. Equipment and
objects used by many individuals such as restaurant’s eating utensils, public phones, ATM machines,
and money are some of the common objects that may act as vehicles of dissemination for some
bacteria.
Public health microbiologists routinely examine utensils used in public eating establishments
and are able to assess the sanitary conditions prevailing based on the results obtained from such
examination. There are various procedures employed in the examination of utensils. One of these
employs a cotton swab soaked in a phosphate buffer. The swab is rubbed over the surface of the
object(s) under study, then returned to the test tube of buffer in which it was originally soaked. The top
of the swap is broken off into the buffer while the portion contaminated by handling is discarded.
Portions of the liquid from the tube containing the swap tip are plated on solid nutrient medium and
colony counts obtained indicate the degree of contamination present.
In this exercise we will use a slightly different method. You will use a sterile swab, which you
will rub over the surface to be tested, and then is streak over the surface of a plate containing nutrient
agar and a selective medium.
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Name_____________________ Date__________
PROCEDURE:
1. Carefully withdraw a sterile cotton swab from its container, making sure that the cotton is moisten
(but not too wet) with the sterile water.
2. Rotate the side of the swap, rather than the tip, over the portion of the object to be tested.
3. Smear and rotate the swap thus contaminated over the surface of the agar on the Petri dish.
5. Incubate the inoculate dish upside down at room temperature for three or more days.
6. In the next lab period you will be asked to exam the dish, count the colonies, and grade the level of
contamination as follows:
7. Next lab period, also describe colony morphology for your two media types as indicated in Unit 1,
Exercise 2 (above).