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Working Dilution Problems

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7 views4 pages

Working Dilution Problems

Uploaded by

Marwa Adly
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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WORKING DILUTION PROBLEMS

It is a common practice to determine microbial counts for both liquid and solid specimens---
suspensions of E. coli in nutrient broth all the way to soil samples and hamburger meat. Most
specimens have high enough numbers of microorganisms that the specimen has to be serially
diluted to quantitate effectively. The following is a step-by-step procedure to working dilution
problems, and includes some practice problems at the end.

The purpose can be determination of bacterial, fungal, or viral counts (indirectly). This protocol is
specific for bacterial counts (colony-forming units, CFUs), but can be modified for fungi (CFUs)
and viruses (plaque-forming units, PFUs for viral counts). A set of serial dilutions is made, a
sample of each is placed into a liquefied agar medium, and the medium poured into a petri dish.
The agar solidifies, with the bacterial cells locked inside of the agar. Colonies grow within the
agar, as well as on top of the agar and below the agar (between the agar and the lower dish).
The procedure described above produces a set of pour plates from many dilutions, but spread
plates (sample spread on top of solidified agar) can be used also. The agar plate allows accurate
counting of the microorganisms, resulting from the equal distribution across the agar plate. This
cannot be done with a fluid solution since 1) one cannot identify purity of the specimen, and 2)
there is no way to enumerate the cells in a liquid.

Bacterial colonies Viral plaques

OBJECTIVES:
Understand how to quantify bacterial cells.
Learn how to solve a dilution problem.

SOLVING DILUTION PROBLEMS:

THE STANDARD FORMULA =


_________colony count on an agar plate_________________
total dilution of tube (used to make plate for colony count) X amount plated

Fall 2011 – Jackie Reynolds, Richland College, Biol 2421


To work the problem, you need 3 values---a colony count from the pour or spread plates, a
dilution factor for the dilution tube from which the countable agar plate comes, and the amount of
the dilution that was plated on the agar plate.

STEP 1: Determine the appropriate plate for counting:


Look at all plates and find the one with 30-300 colonies (or plaques), preferably. Greater than
300 and less than 30 is a high degree of error. Air contaminants can contribute significantly to a
really low count and a high count can be confounded by error in counting too many small
colonies.

Use the total dilution for the tube from where the plate count was obtained. If duplicate plates
(with same amount plated) have been made from one dilution, average the counts together.

STEP 2: Determine the total dilution for the dilution tubes:


Dilution = amount of specimen transferred divided by the [amount of specimen transferred +
amount already in tube].

Determine the dilution factor for each tube in the dilution series.
Multiply the individual dilution of the tube X previous total dilution

To calculate this dilution series:

Determine the dilution factor of each tube in the set.


dilution factor for a tube = amount of sample
amount of sample + amt. of diluent in tube

But after the first tube, each tube is a dilution of the previous dilution tube.
SO…..
total dilution factor = previous dilution of tube X dilution of next container

FOR THE ABOVE DILUTION SERIES:


1 ml added to 9ml = 1/10 for 1st tube
1ml added to 9ml = 1/10 for 2nd tube
previous dilution of 1/10 (1st tube) X 1/10 (2nd tube) = total dilution of 1/100 (= 10-2 = 1/102)

STEP 3: Determine the amount plated (the amount of dilution used to make the
particular pour plate or spread plate). There is nothing to calculate here: the value will be stated
in the procedure, or it will be given in the problem.

2
SOLVING ABOVE PROBLEM:
1. The countable plate is the one with 71 colonies.
2. The total dilution of 3rd tube from which above pour plate was made =
1/10 X 1/10 X 1/10 = 1/103.
3. The amount used to make that pour plate = 1ml

71 colonies = 71 X 103 = 7.1 X 104 (scientific notation) OR 71,000/ml


1/103 X 1

RULES FOR SCIENTIFIC NOTATION

5.67 x 10 5
coefficient base exponent

In order for a number to be in correct scientific notation, the following conditions must be true:

1. The coefficient must be greater than or equal to 1 and less than 10.
2. The base must be 10.
3. The exponent must show the number of decimal places that the decimal needs to be moved
to change the number to standard notation. A negative exponent means that the decimal is
moved to the left when changing to standard notation.

A GOOD resource for pictures…


http://microbelibrary.org/component/resource/laboratory-test/2880-serial-dilution

3
1.

2. Determine the number of bacterial cells per ml. in the original culture.

3. Determine the number of bacterial cells per gram of meat.

4
(too numerous to count)

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