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TECHNIQUE ©David B. Fankhauser, Ph.D., Professor of Biology and Chemistry University of Cincinnati Clermont College, Batavia OH 45103 |
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This technique allows you to produce a homogeneous lawn of bacteria within a thin layer of agar across the surface of a plate. Bacteria are added to a soft top agar (0.75% agar, as opposed to the usual 1.5% for agar plates) which has been melted at 100°C and cooled to 45°C. This is warm enough so the agar remains liquid, but cool enough so that the bacteria are not killed (for a period of time). The melted agar/bacterial suspension is mixed and poured evenly across the top of an agar plate and allowed to solidify.
The bacteria distributed through the top
agar will grow to produce a homogeneously turbid lawn. If the freshly seeded
lawn is exposed to various antibacterial agents and then incubated at 37°C,
any inhibition of bacterial growth will cause a reduction in the turbidity
of the lawn near the agent: the greater the antibacterial action, the wider
the zone of inhibition. Thus, the antibacterial strength of the agent may
be judged by the width of the zone of inhibition around it.
| EQUIPMENT: | SUPPLIES: |
| sterile capped 13x100 mm tubes
sterile pipettes (0.1, 1.0 mL) or sterile tips for Displacement pipetter hot block, 45°C, warmed up vortex Bunsen Burner |
melted top agar, about 60°C
fresh overnight culture of indicator bacteria (such as E. coli B or Staphylococcus aureus) pre-warmed nutrient agar plates (or tryptone soy agar plates,etc) dishpan with diluted Lysol into which to discard used tubes |
PROTOCOL:
| a. | Vortex to mix the bacteria into the melted top agar |
| b. | Immediately pour out onto pre-warmed agar plate to empty the tube. |
| c. | Immediately tilt back and forth, shake gently to evenly distribute. Avoid bubbles, and stop agitating before agar begins to gel. Let set undisturbed to gel fully, (several minutes). |