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TITERING OF BACTERIAL VIRUSES
©David B. Fankhauser, Ph.D.,
Professor of Biology and Chemistry
University of Cincinnati Clermont College,
Batavia OH 45103
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equipment to
dilution phage
stock
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This page has been accessed
times since day month year.
17 Feb 1993, rvsd 31 Dec '95, 23 July '96, 22 July '97,
12 Aug 02, 11 Aug 03
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pour seeded top agar
with
aliquot of phage over
a prewarmed plate.
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Related protocols: Preparation
of Phage Stocks
Commonly Used Media for Phage Growth
Agar Overlay Technique
When an individual bacterial virus grows in a bacterial host suspended
in a top agar lawn, its progeny infect and lyse the surrounding host cells.
This causes the appearance of a "hole" or plaque in the otherwise homogeneous
bacterial lawn. Since each plaque represents a single virus, the number
of viruses in the aliquot added to the plate is equal to the number of
plaques which appear.
Here is the experimental plan:
| EQUIPMENT: |
SUPPLIES: |
sterile capped 16x150 mm test tubes
sterile capped 13x100 mm tubes
sterile pipettes, 0.1 mL and 1.0 mL
hot block, 45°C
vortex
Bunsen Burner
37°C incubatormelted top agar, about 60°C |
phage culture to be titered
sensitive host bacteria grown ON in TSB
(such as E. coli B)
sterile dH2O in 10.0 mL repipet
pre-warmed to 37°C tryptone soy agar plates
(or LB agar plates for lambda phage)
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PROTOCOL:
| THE PREVIOUS NIGHT: |
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1. Inoculate about 3-4 mL (for thirty plates) of nutrient broth or
tryptone soy broth with a sensitive host (E.g.: E. coli B). Grow
ON at 37°C in hot block. (Aeration is not mandatory.) |
| THE DAY OF ASSAY: |
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Equipment for dilutions: 10 uL phage stock into 10 mL
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2. Prepare a dilution of the phage such that there are about 103
particles per mL (usually a dilution of 106: 10 uL into 10.0
mL, repeat a second time). |
Add 0.1 mL down the side The bacteria are on top:
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3. Set up seeded top agar:
a. Pipet about 2 mL of melted agar into sterile capped 13x100
mm tubes in 45°C hot block.
b. Pipet about 0.1 mL host bacteria (E. coli B) using a 1.0
mL pipet into melted agar (down the side of the tube is OK). |
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4. Add phage: Pipet 10 uL or 100 uL of 10-6 phage into the
host-inoculated tube (deliver with care, just below surface of agar). |
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5. Vortex to mix. |
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6. Pour out and distribute over a pre-warmed agar plate, immediately
tilt back and forth to evenly distribute before it begins to gel. Let sit
undisturbed until gelled. |
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6. When gelled (1-2 minutes), invert plates, incubate ON at 37°C. |
| THE NEXT DAY: |
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7. Count all plaques, record data, calculate phage particles/mL in
the original culture. |
To do the calculation of number of phage particles per mL, apply the
following formula:
phage/mL = (number plaques/plate) x (1/mL plated) x dilution
factor
For example, if you got 347 plaques when you plated out 0.1 mL of a
106 diluted phage suspension,
the titer is 3.47 x 109/mL.
Go to David
Fankhauser's Main Page
Send Email to: FANKHADB@UC.EDU

