The document discusses different types of media used for growing microorganisms. It describes liquid, semisolid and solid media, and how they differ in their physical properties. It also discusses the chemical composition of synthetic versus nonsynthetic media and how certain media can be selective or differential to isolate specific microbes.
The document discusses different types of media used for growing microorganisms. It describes liquid, semisolid and solid media, and how they differ in their physical properties. It also discusses the chemical composition of synthetic versus nonsynthetic media and how certain media can be selective or differential to isolate specific microbes.
The document discusses different types of media used for growing microorganisms. It describes liquid, semisolid and solid media, and how they differ in their physical properties. It also discusses the chemical composition of synthetic versus nonsynthetic media and how certain media can be selective or differential to isolate specific microbes.
The document discusses different types of media used for growing microorganisms. It describes liquid, semisolid and solid media, and how they differ in their physical properties. It also discusses the chemical composition of synthetic versus nonsynthetic media and how certain media can be selective or differential to isolate specific microbes.
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Lecture 03
04/08/2018
Types of Media for growth of
microorganisms Media: The Foundations of Culturing
• The development of techniques for growing microbes enabled the
close examination of a microbe and its morphology, physiology and genetics.
• Basic principle for a medium:
The microorganisms being cultured need to be provided with all of their required nutrients in an artificial medium.
• Culture media are contained in test tubes, flasks or Petri dishes.
• Inoculation is performed by tools as loops, needles, pipettes, and swabs. • For an experiment to be properly controlled, sterile technique is necessary. • Sterile technique: Inoculation with a sterile medium and inoculating tools with sterile tips must be used. • Measures must be taken to prevent introduction of non-sterile materials, such as room air, fingers and any other thing, directly into the media. Types of Media • Most media discussed are designed for bacteria and fungi, though algae and some protozoa can be propagated in media.
• Viruses can only be cultivated in live host cells.
Media fall into three general categories based on their properties: physical state, chemical composition, and functional type. Physical States of Media
• Liquid media are defined as water-based solutions that do not
solidify at temperatures above freezing and that tend to flow freely when the container is tilted. • These media, termed broths, milks, or infusions, are made by dissolving various solutes in distilled water. • Growth occurs throughout the container and can then present a dispersed, cloudy, or flaky appearance. • A common laboratory medium, nutrient broth, contains beef extract and peptone dissolved in water. • Methylene blue milk and litmus milk contain whole milk and dyes. • Fluid thioglycollate is a slightly viscous broth used for determining patterns of growth in oxygen. • Urea broth is used to show a biochemical reaction in which the enzyme urease digests urea and releases ammonium. • This raises the pH of the solution and causes the dye to become increasingly pink. Left: uninoculated broth, pH 7; middle: growth with no change; right: positive, pH 8.0. • Presence-Absence Broth is for detecting the presence of coliform bacteria in water samples. • It contains lactose and bromcresol purple dye. • As coliforms use lactose, they release acidic substances. This lowers the pH and changes the dye from purple to yellow (right is Escherichia coli). • Noncoliforms such as Pseudomonas grow but do not change the pH (purple color indicates neutral pH). Semisolid media • At ordinary room temperature, semisolid media exhibit a clotlike consistency because they contain an amount of solidifying agent (agar or gelatin) that thickens them but does not produce a firm substrate. • Semisolid media are used to determine the motility of bacteria and to localize a reaction at a specific site. • Motility test medium and sulfur indole motility (SIM) medium both contain only 0.3–0.5% of agar. • In both cases, the medium is stabbed carefully in the center with an inoculating needle and later observed for the pattern of growth around the stab line. • Semisolid media have more body than liquid media but are softer than solid media. • They do not flow freely and have a soft, clotlike consistency. • SIM medium: (1) An uninoculated tube. The location of growth can be used to determine (2) Nonmotility (3) or motility (4) The medium reacts with any H2S gas to produce a black precipitate. Solid media • Solid media provide a firm surface on which cells can form discrete colonies and are advantageous for isolating and culturing bacteria and fungi. Liquefiable solid media • Liquefiable solid media, or reversible solid media, contain a solidifying agent that changes its physical properties in response to temperature. • The most widely used and effective of these agents is agar, a polysaccharide isolated from the red alga Gelidium. • The benefts of agar are numerous. • It is solid at room temperature, and it melts (liquefies) at the boiling temperature of water (100°C or 212°F). • Once liquefied, agar does not resolidify until it cools to 42°C (108°F), so it can be inoculated and poured in liquid form at temperatures (45°C to 50°C) that will not harm the microbes or the handler (body temperature is about 37°C or 98.6°F). • Agar is flexible and moldable, and it provides a basic framework to hold moisture and nutrients. • Another useful property is that it is not readily digestible and thus not a nutrient for most microorganisms. • Any medium containing 1% to 5% agar usually has the word agar in its name. • Nutrient agar is a common one. Like nutrient broth, it contains beef extract and peptone, as well as 1.5% agar by weight. Gelatin • Gelatin creates a reasonably solid surface in concentrations of 10% to 15%. • The main drawback for gelatin is that it can be digested by microbes and will melt at room and warmer temperatures, leaving a liquid. Nonliquefiable solid media • Nonliquefiable solid media do not melt. They include materials such as rice grains (used to grow fungi), cooked meat media (good for anaerobes), and egg or serum media that are permanently coagulated or hardened by moist heat. Chemical Content of Media • Media with a chemically defined composition are termed synthetic. • Such media contain pure chemical nutrients that vary little from one source to another and have a molecular content specified by an exact formula. • Synthetic media come in many forms. Some media, such as minimal media for fungi, contain a few salts and amino acids dissolved in water. • Others contain dozens of precisely measured ingredients. • But they can only be used when the exact nutritional needs of the test organisms are known. • A defined medium that was developed to grow the parasitic protozoan Leishmania required 75 different chemicals. Nonsynthetic, or Complex medium • If even one component of a given medium is not chemically definable, the medium is a nonsynthetic, or complex medium. • The composition of this type of medium is not definable by an exact chemical formula. • Substances that can make it nonsynthetic are extracts from animal or plant tissues including such materials as ground-up cells and secretions. • Other examples are blood, serum, meat extracts, infusions, milk, soybean digests and peptone. • Peptone is a partially digested protein, rich in amino acids, that is often used as a carbon and nitrogen source. • Nutrient broth, blood agar, and MacConkey agar, though different in function and appearance, are all complex nonsynthetic media. • They present a rich mixture of nutrients for microbes with complex nutritional needs. General-purpose media • General-purpose media are designed to grow a broad spectrum of microbes that do not have special growth requirements. • As a rule, these media are nonsynthetic (complex) and contain a mixture of nutrients that could support the growth of a variety of bacteria and fungi. • These include nutrient agar and broth, brain-heart infusion, and trypticase soy agar (TSA). • TSA is a complex medium that contains partially digested milk protein (casein), soybean digest, NaCl, and agar. Enriched medium • An enriched medium contains complex organic substances such as blood, serum, hemoglobin, or special growth factors that certain species must be provided in order to grow. • These growth factors are organic compounds such as vitamins and amino acids that the microbes cannot synthesize themselves. • Bacteria that require growth factors and complex nutrients are termed fastidious. • Blood agar is made by adding sterile animal blood (usually from sheep) to a sterile agar base, is widely employed to grow fastidious streptococci and other pathogens. • Blood agar plate growing bacteria from the human throat. • Note that this medium can also differentiate among colonies by the zones of hemolysis they may show. • Note that some colonies have clear zones (beta hemolysis) and others have less defined zones. • Culture of Neisseria sp. on Thayer-Martin medium or chocolate agar. • chocolate agar is made by heating blood agar and does not contain chocolate—it just has that appearance. • It does not produce hemolysis. Selective and Differential Media • Some of the cleverest and most inventive media recipes belong to the categories of selective and differential media. • These media are designed for special microbial groups, and they have extensive applications in isolation and identification. • They can permit, in a single step, the preliminary identification of a genus or even a species. Selective medium • A selective medium contains one or more agents that inhibit the growth of a certain microbe or microbes (call them A, B, and C) but not another (D). • This difference favors, or selects, microbe D and allows it to grow by itself. • Selective media are very important in primary isolation of a specific type of microorganism from samples containing mixtures of different species—for example, feces, saliva, skin, water, and soil. • They suppress the unwanted background organisms and allow growth of the desired ones. • Mannitol salt agar (MSA) contains a high concentration of NaCl (7.5%) that is quite inhibitory to most human pathogens. • One exception is the genus Staphylococcus, which grows well in this medium and consequently can be amplified in mixed samples. • It is also differential because it contains a dye (phenol red) that changes color under variations in pH, and mannitol, a sugar that can be converted to acid. • The left side shows S. epidermidis, a species that does not use mannitol (red). • The right shows S. aureus, a pathogen that uses mannitol (yellow). • Bile salts, a component of feces, inhibit most gram-positive bacteria while permitting many gram-negative rods to grow. • Media for isolating intestinal pathogens (MacConkey agar, Hektoen enteric [HE] agar) contain bile salts as a selective agent. • MacConkey agar differentiates between lactose-fermenting bacteria (indicated by a pink-red reaction in the center of the colony) and lactose-negative bacteria (indicated by an off- white colony with no dye reaction). Other selective agents • Dyes such as methylene blue and crystal violet also inhibit certain gram-positive bacteria. • Other agents that have selective properties are antimicrobial drugs and acid. • Some selective media contain strongly inhibitory agents to favor the growth of a pathogen that would otherwise be overlooked because of its low numbers in a specimen. • Selenite and brilliant green dye are used in media to isolate Salmonella from feces. • Sodium azide is used to isolate enterococci from water and food. Differential media • Differential media grow several types of microorganisms but are designed to bring out visible differences among those microorganisms. • Differences show up as variations in colony size or color, in media color changes, or in the formation of gas bubbles and precipitates • Several newer forms of differential media contain artificial substrates called chromogens that release a wide variety of colors, each tied to a specific microbe. • Other chromogenic agar is available for identifying Staphylococcus, Listeria, and pathogenic yeasts. • Triple sugar iron agar (TSIA) inoculated on the surface and stabbed into the thicker region at the bottom (butt). • This medium contains three sugars, phenol red dye to indicate pH changes (bright yellow is acid, various shades of red, basic), and iron salt to show H2S gas production. Reactions are (1) no growth; • (2) growth with no acid production (sugars not used); • (3) acid production in the butt only; • (4) acid production in all areas of the medium; • (5) acid and H2S production in butt (black precipitate). • A medium developed for culturing and identifying the most common urinary pathogens. • CHROMagar Orientation™ uses color-forming reactions to distinguish at least seven species and permits rapid identification and treatment. In the example, the bacteria were streaked so as to spell their own names. Dyes as differential agents • Dyes are effective differential agents because many of them are pH indicators that change color in response to the production of an acid or a base. • For example, MacConkey agar contains neutral red, a dye that is yellow when neutral and pink or red when acidic. • A common intestinal bacterium such as Escherichia coli that gives off acid when it metabolizes the lactose in the medium develops red to pink colonies, and one such as Salmonella that does not give off acid remains its natural color (off-white). Carbohydrate fermentation in broths. • This medium is designed to show fermentation (acid production) using phenol red broth and gas formation by means of a small, inverted Durham tube for collecting gas bubbles. • The tube on the left is an uninoculated negative control; • the center tube is positive for acid (yellow) and gas (open space); • the tube on the right shows growth but neither acid nor gas. Miscellaneous Media • A reducing medium contains a substance (thioglycollic acid or cystine) that absorbs oxygen or slows the penetration of oxygen in a medium, thus reducing its availability. • Reducing media are important for growing anaerobic bacteria or for determining oxygen requirements of isolates. • Carbohydrate fermentation media contain sugars that can be fermented (converted to acids) and a pH indicator to show this reaction. Transport media • Transport media are used to maintain and preserve specimens that have to be held for a period of time before clinical analysis or to sustain delicate species that die rapidly if not held under stable conditions. • Stuart’s and Amie’s transport media contain buffers and absorbants to prevent cell destruction but will not support growth. • Assay media are used by technologists to test the effectiveness of antimicrobial drugs and by drug manufacturers to assess the effect of disinfectants, antiseptics, cosmetics, and preservatives on the growth of microorganisms.
• Enumeration media are used by industrial and
environmental microbiologists to count the numbers of organisms in milk, water, food, soil, and other samples. Animal cell culture • A number of significant microbial groups (viruses, rickettsias, and a few bacteria) will only grow on live cells or animals. • These obligate parasites have unique requirements that must be provided by living animals such as rabbits, guinea pigs, mice, chickens, and the early life stages (embryos) of birds. • Such animals can be an indispensable aid for studying, growing, and identifying microorganisms. • Animal inoculation is an essential step in testing the effects of drugs and the effectiveness of vaccines before they are administered to humans. • Animals are an important source of antibodies, antisera, antitoxins, and other immune products that can be used in therapy or testing.