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Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

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Methods of Culturing Microorganisms
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Page 1: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Methods of Culturing Microorganisms

Page 2: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Specimen Collection

Page 3: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Five basic techniques

1. Inoculate2. Incubate3. Isolation4. Inspection5. Identification

Page 4: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Inoculation

•Culture: the propagation of microorganisms with various media

•Medium (pl. media): a nutrient used to grow microorganisms outside their natural habitat

•Inoculation: the implantation of microorganisms into or onto culture media

Page 5: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Incubation

Incubator: media containing inoculants are placed in temperature-controlled chambers•Usual laboratory propagation temperatures fall between 20°C and 40°C•Atmospheric gases such as O2 and CO2 may be required for the growth of certain microbes•During incubation, microbes grow and multiply, producing visible growth in the media

Page 6: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Isolation •Based on the concept that if an individual cell is separated from other cells on a nutrient surface, it will form a colony

•Colony: a macroscopic cluster of cells appearing on a solid medium arising from the multiplication of a single cell

•Requires the following-a medium with a firm

surface-a Petri dish-inoculating tools

Discussed in more detail later in notes

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Inspection

Page 8: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Identification

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Isolation: A single visible colony represents a pure culture or single type of bacterium isolated from a mixed culture

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Isolation: Various Conditions of Cultures

Pure Culture Mixed Culture Contaminated Culture

(c)(b)(a)

One type of microbe

More than one type of microbe

Unwanted microbe present

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Question

• Can you isolate a colony using liquid culture?

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Three basic methods of isolating bacteria

• Streak Plate• Loop Dilution• Spread Plate

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Isolation: Streak Plate

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Isolation: Loop Dilution

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Isolation: Spread Plate

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Media

• Classified according to three properties– Physical state– Chemical composition– Functional types

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Physical State

• 1. Liquid media (I.e. tryptic soy broth=TSB)

• 2. Semi-solid media

• 3. Solid media (I.e. tryptic soy agar=TSA)

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Liquid media are water-based solutions that are generally termed broths, milks and infusions.

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Semi-solid media contain a low percentage (<1%) of agar, which can be used for motility testing.

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Solid media contain a high percent (1-5%) of agar, which enables the formation of discrete colonies.

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Chemical content

• Synthetic media• Nonsynthetic or complex media

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Chemically defined media-media whose compositions are precisely chemically

defined

-contain pure organic and inorganic compounds that vary little from one source to another

-molecular content specified by an exact formula

•Minimal media-contain nothing more than a few essential

compounds such as salts and amino acids

-some contain a variety of defined organic and inorganic chemicals

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Complex media contain ingredients that are not chemically defined or pure (i.e. animal extracts).

TSA + 5% sheep blood (Do we know the exact percentages of chemicals in the sheep blood?)

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Functional types of growth media

• Selective media• Differential media

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Comparison of Selective and Differential Media

Mixedsample

Mixedsample

Differential medium(All 3 species grow but mayshow different reactions.)

General-purposenondifferential medium

(All species have a similarappearance.)

Selective medium(One species grows.)

(b)(a)

General-purposenonselective medium

(All species grow.)

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Selective media enables (selects) one type of bacteria to grow, while differential media allows bacteria to show different reactions (i.e. colony color)

Page 26: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Selective media enables (selects) one type of bacteria to grow, while differential media allows bacteria to show different reactions (i.e. colony color)

Page 27: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Examples of differential

media

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Mannitol salt agar (MSA) contains 7.5% salt which selects for gram positive and also contains mannitol (carbohydrate) plus a pH indicator to indicate when mannitol has been fermented to an acid…media turns from pink to yellow

Differential media we will use in class

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MacConkey agar contains bile salts and dyes that inhibit gram-positive bacteria and hence selects for gram negative. Also turns dark color when lactose is fermented

Differential media we will use in class

Page 30: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Maintenance and Disposal of Cultures

•Cultures and specimens constitute a potential hazard

•Prompt disposal is required

•Stock cultures represent a “living catalog” for study and experimentation

•The American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) in Manassas, VA is the largest culture collection in the U.S.

Page 31: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Microscopy

Page 32: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Science relies on technology

• The progress of microbiology and many other disciplines relies heavily on the introduction of new technologies

• Technologies such as new types of media or microscopes lead to advances in microbiology

• Without a microscope it would be impossible to characterize the morphology of bacteria.

Page 33: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

History of the Microscope• Development of the microscope originated in

1676 by Anton van Leeuwenhoek

• Luckily, he was a skilled observer and artist and produced many fine illustrations of microbes (“animalcules”)

• Unfortunately, he was not willing to share his microscopes or knowledge with other scientists until much later in life to help the progress of microbiology

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We measure specimens based on the metric system. We will be looking at bacteria ranging from 1 um to 10 um.

Page 35: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Principles of Light Microscopy

•Magnification-objective lens: closest to the specimen, forms the

initial image called the real image

-ocular lens: forms the second image called the virtual image that will be received by the eye and converted to the retinal and visual image

•Total magnification

Power of Objective

Usual power of ocular

Total magnification

4x scanning objective

10x 40x

10x low power objective

10x 100x

40x high dry objective

10x 400x

100x oil immersion objective

10x 1000x

Page 36: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Magnification is useless without good resolution.

•Resolution (resolving power)-the capacity of an optical

system to distinguish or separate two adjacent points or objects from one another

-the human eye can resolve two objects that are no closer than 0.2 mm apart

• The shorter the wavelength, the better the resolution (the ability to see 2 separate units)

Page 37: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

The Effect of Wavelength on Resolution

High resolutionLow resolution

(a) (b)

High resolution distinguishes magnified objects clearly

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Wavelength and Resolution

• Is (a) or (b) resolved?• Which resolves images

better, gamma rays or visible light?

Page 39: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Properties of Light

• Light has the ability to a) reflect, b) transmit (pass through), c) absorb, d) refract and

A, B, & C

D

Page 40: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Resolution can be increased by using immersion oil.

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A compound microscope is typically used in teaching and research laboratories

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One objective lens can hold up to a dozen small lenses inside

Page 43: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Optical microscopes

• All have a maximum magnification of 1000x--2000X– Bright-field– Dark-field– Phase-contrast– Differential interference– Fluorescent– Confocal

Page 44: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Bright-field• Most commonly used in laboratories• Observe live or preserved stained

specimens

Types of Optical Microscopes

Page 45: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Dark-field•Observe live unstained specimens

•View an outline of the specimens

Types of Optical Microscopes

Page 46: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Phase-contrast•Observe live specimens•View internal cellular detail

Types of Optical Microscopes

Page 47: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Fluorescent Microscopy

• Fluorescence stain or dye• UV radiation causes emission of

visible light from dye• Diagnostic tool

Page 48: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Fluorescent staining on a fresh sample of cheek scrapings from the oral cavity. Fuzzy

cells are cheek cells, distinct rods and cocci are bacteria. Red=dead, green=live

Page 49: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Example of a confocal microscope

Fluorescence or unstained specimen images are combined to form a three-dimensional image.

Page 50: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Electron microscopy

• Very high magnification (100,000-1,000,000X)

• Transmission electron microscope (TEM)– View internal structures of cells

• Scanning electron microscope (SEM)– Three-dimensional images

Page 51: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM)

Page 52: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Example of False-color Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)

Page 53: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.
Page 54: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Comparison of optical and electron microscopes

Page 55: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

What does an electron microscope use to visualize specimens?

Which type of microscope has better resolving power, bright-field or electron?

Page 56: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

In lab, we use Bright-Field Light Microscopy

• We will perform the following light microscopy techniques:

• Wet mounts– Wet mount and hanging drop methods

• Smears– Spread, air-dry, heat fix

• Simple Staining– Cheek cells with methylene blue (BI231)

• Differential Staining– Gram stain– Acid-fast (time permitting)

• Special Staining– Capsule stain– Flagellar stain (prepared slides since this is a difficult

technique)– Endospore stain (time permitting)

Page 57: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Wet mounts• We will use the hanging

drop technique to investigate bacterial motility:– Advantages of the hanging

drop:• Easy to prepare• Bacteria are live so we can

see motility

–Disadvantages of the hanging drop:

•Requires special depression slide•Difficult to visualize since microbes are not stained•Bacteria are live and therefore slides must be disinfected

Page 58: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Smears• Performing quality smears takes practice. There are

many steps in the preparation of a smear that must be performed correctly. (Think of Goldilocks that wants her porridge “just right”)

• 1. Smear bacteria onto slide from broth or agar

• Too thick and you can’t see through specimen, too thin and you can’t find any bacteria

• 2. Air dry• Again, you do not want too large a smear or it will take a

long time for the smear to completely air dry.

• 3. Heat Fix (see next slide)

Page 59: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Smears (cont.)

• 3. Heat Fix• Pass slide through flame quickly 3-4 times• Heat fix too little and organisms may wash off

slide• Heat fix too much and organisms may be

distorted

• Heat fixation:– 1. kills organisms– 2. adheres specimen to slide– 3. promotes stainability of specimen

Page 60: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Stains

• Positive stains– Dye binds to the specimen

• Negative stains– Dye does not bind to the specimen,

but rather around the specimen.

Which type of stain do we usually use?Why do positive stains bind to the specimen?What makes a specimen negatively charged?

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Positive stains are basic dyes (positive charge) that bind negative charge cells, and negative stains are acidic dyes (negative charge) that bind the background.

Molecular structure of methylene blue (a positive stain attracted to ?)

Page 62: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Positive stainsSimple stain

– One dye• Ex. Methylene blue, crystal

violet

• In BI231, you applied one stain (methylene blue) to visualize your cheek (buccal) cells.

Page 63: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Positive stainsDifferential stain

– Two-different colored dyes • Ex. Gram stain

• Allow us to differentiate between types of bacteria.– Gram Stain

• Gram-positive vs. Gram-negative• See next slide

– Acid-Fast Stain• Used to identify acid-fast bacteria with

a waxy, lipid cell wall.• Detects Mycobacteria like M.

tuberculosis and M. leprosae• Most of the bacteria in our lab in Acid-

Fast negative

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Positive Stains: Gram Stain

• Most frequently used stain• Dictates which type of

antibiotic treatment• Gram-Positive

– Purple– Penicillin– Thick Peptidoglycan– 4 P’s (Positive, Purple, Penicillin,

Peptidoglycan)– 1 plasma membrane

• Gram-Negative– Red– Streptomycin– Thin peptidoglycan– 2 plasma membranes

Page 65: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Positive stainsSpecial stain

– Emphasize certain cell parts• Ex. Capsule stain

Page 66: Methods of Culturing Microorganisms. Specimen Collection.

Special StainsWe use these special stains to identify special

structures that some bacteria possess

• Capsule Stain• Capsule does not stain so we stain the background• Can not heat-fix or capsule will be destroyed

• Flagellar Stain• Very difficult stain, we will look at prepared slides

• Endospore Stain• The endospore is difficult to stain since it is made

of a thick, hard to penetrate spore wall. We will boil the stain to help it penetrate the spore coat.


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