Pure Culture Isolation and Biochemical Testing
Pure Culture Isolation and Biochemical Testing
Objectives:
At the end of the class, the students are expected to: 1.Learn the different concept in pure culture isolation and biochemical testing. 2.Apply these concepts to the next laboratory activities 3.Develop skills in identifying unknown bacteria.
Pure Culture
Most infectious materials contain several kinds of bacteria. If they are plated onto the surface of the solid medium, colonies will form that are exact copies of the same organism.
A visible colony arises from a single spore or vegetative cell or from a group of the same organisms attached to one another in clumps or chains
Microbial colonies often have distinctive appearance that distinguishes one microbe from another . The bacteria must be distributed widely enough so that the colonies are visibly separated from each other.
Cultural Characterisitcs
Hemolysis Size Form of Margin Elevation Density Color Consistency Pigment Odor
Isolation Technique
In nature microbial cultures are mixed Identification relies upon isolating individual colonies Testing requires pure cultures As a result isolation technique provides an essential microbiological tool
Loop is generally used when inoculating specimen Needle - When transferring pure cultures from plates to tubes Swab Specimen- roll the cotton swab over a small area of the surface at the edge, then streak out from this inoculated area
Plunging a hot wire loop into the specimen should be discourage because this may cause: Contamination of the environment by bacterial aerosol Death of microorganism in the specimen
Bacterial aerosol- rough agar surfaces; excessive vibration or rattling of the wire loop within the tube or the plate
Colony Description
Hemolysis
Qualitative Determination of Bacterial Population 1. Standard/ Viable Count 2. Spectophotometric (Turbidimetric) Analysis
Greater Accuracy is achieved by plating duplicates or triplicates of each dilution Dilution Blanks: Sterile Buffered Water 0.85 % NaCl sterile culture medium
Spectrophotometric Analysis
is based on Turbidimetry and indirectly measures all bacteria dead or alive Turbidity- ability of particles in suspension to refract and deflect light rays passing through the suspension such that the light is reflected back into the eyes of the observer
Optical Density measurement of turbidity determined in a spectrophotometer the amount of light scattered depends on the number and size of the particles in suspension the amount of light transmitted decreases as the cell population increases
Urine Specimen
The recovery of microorganisms in the urine sample does not categorically indicate a urinary tract infection, because even urine sample collected by catheter may become contaminated. Liquid soap containing hexachlorophene- suitable cleansing agent Specimen from patients with the UTI contains significantly high numbers of bacteria
Quantitation Methods
1. Calibrated loop, Direct Streak Method or Platinum Loop technique - traditional method in which a known amount of uncentrifuged urine is measured with either 0.01 or 0.001 mL loop and placed on two different media Bacteria/ mL= # colonies/ quantity of urine
Pour Plate used when specimen contain unusually high and mixed population as to make differentiation of species difficult or impossible
Catalase test
It converts 3% H2O2 to oxygen and water, resulting in immediate bubling. Staphylococci are positive. Streptococci and enterococci are negative.
Catalase test
Catalase is an enzyme that decomposes hydrogen peroxide into oxygen and water. Excluding the Streptococci, most aerobic and facultative anaerobic bacteria possess catalytic activity.
Hydrogen peroxide forms as one of the oxidative end products of aerobic carbohydrate metabolism. Catalase converts hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. The catalase test is commonly used to differentiate streptococci (negative) for staphylococci (positive).
Coagulase Test
Principle: This test is used to differentiate S. aureus( Positive) from coagualse negative staphylococci(negative) -S. aureus produces two forms of coagulase: bound and free. - Bound Coagulase, or Clumping Factor,is bound to the bacterial cell wall and reacts directly to fibrinogen -This rersults in an alteration of fibrinogen so that that it precipiatates on the staphylococcal cells, causing the cells to clump when a bacterial suspension is mixed with plasma
Coagulase Test
Free Coagulase- an extracellular protein enzyme that causes the formation of clot when S. aureus colonies are incubated with plasma.
- the clotting mechanism involves the activation of a plasma COAGULASE REACTING FACTOR(CRF) which is modified or dervied thrombin molecule, to form a coahulase- CRF complex. This complex in turn reacts with fibrinogen to produce the fibrin clot
Coagulase Test
A. Slide Coagulase Detects: Cell bound coagulase
Coagulase Test
B. Tube Coagulase Detects: Free Coagulase
Reagent; 0.5 mL Rabbits plasma + colony incubated 37 c Positive: gel like clot
Coagulase Test
NOTES: Check every 30 minutes for 4 hours to avoid false (-) because of Staphylokinase If negative after 4 hours confirm with 20 hours incubation False positive coagulase test: citrate anticoagulant because citrate utilizing organism release calcium
Novobiocin
Organisms that are resistant grow to the edge of the disk. S. Saprophyticus is resistant. Other coag-neg staph are susceptible. Test is performed on coagneg staph from urine.S. epidermidis is sensitive
Bacitracin disk
Group A strep is susceptible. Also known as the A disk. No longer recommended because some groups C and G are also susceptible.
SXT
Group A and B strep are resistant. Group C and G strep are susceptible. Used in combination with bacitracin disk to differentiate group A strep from group C or G strep.
PYR
If PYR is hydrolyzed, a red color develops after addition of a color developer. Group A strep and enterococci are positive. More specific than bacitracin for group A strep. Group A strep is the only species of betahemolytic strep that is PYR-positive
CAMP test
Group B strep enhances hemolysis of beta-hemolytic S. aureus. An arrowhead formation is seen at the juncture of the two organisms.
Hippurate hydrolysis
If hippurate is hydrolyzed, a precipitate forms when ferric chloride is added to the medium. Group B strep is positive.
Optochin disk
S. pneumoniae is susceptible. Also known as P disk
Urease
Urease broth is a differential medium that tests the ability of an organism to produce an exoenzyme, called urease, that hydrolyzes urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide. The broth contains two pH buffers, urea, a very small amount of nutrients for the bacteria, and the pH indicator phenol red. Phenol red turns yellow in an acidic environment and fuchsia in an alkaline environment. If the urea in the broth is degraded and ammonia is produced, an alkaline environment is created, and the media turns pink.
PRINCIPLE: Bile esculin medium contains esculin and peptone for nutrition and bile to inhibit Gram-positive bacteria other than Group D streptococci and enterococci. Bile esculin azide agar uses sodium azide to inhibit Gram-negative bacteria. Ferric citrate is added as a color indicator.
Esculin is a glycoside (a sugar molecule bonded by an acetyl linkage to an alcohol) composed of glucose and esculetin. These linkages are easily hydrolyzed under acidic conditions. Many bacteria can hydrolyze esculin, but few can do so in the presence of bile.
GLYCOLYSIS
ACID ESCULIN
b-D-Glucose
ESCULITIN
Fe+3