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Anaerobic Culture Techniques

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Anaerobic microorganisms are widespread and very important ... P. aeruginosa Strict aerobe. Enterococcus Facultative. Grows aerobic or anaerobic. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anaerobic Culture Techniques


1
Anaerobic Culture Techniques
  • 3rd Science Practical Seminar 1
  • Vincent OFlaherty

2
  • Anaerobic microorganisms are widespread and very
    important
  • Do not require oxygen for growth - often
    extremely toxic

3
  • Facultative anaerobes - can grow in the presence
    or absence of oxygen
  • Obtain energy by both respiration and
    fermentation
  • Oxygen not toxic, some use nitrate (NO3-) or
    sulphate (SO42-) as a terminal electron acceptor
    under anaerobic conditions

4
  • Obligate (strict) anaerobes - oxygen is toxic to
    these organisms, do not use oxygen as terminal
    electron acceptor
  • Archaea such as methanogens and Bacteria, e.g
    Clostridia, Bacteriodes etc. etc.

5
  • Microaerophilic organisms - require low levels of
    oxygen for growth, but cannot tolerate the levels
    present in the atmosphere
  • Aerotolerant Anaerobes Metabolism is anaerobic
    but they are unaffected by the presence of
    oxygen.

6
Oxygen Toxicity
  • Oxygen is used by aerobic and facultatively
    anaerobic organisms as its strong oxidising
    ability makes it an excellent electron acceptor
  • During the stepwise reduction of oxygen, which
    takes place in respiration toxic and highly
    reactive intermediates are produced reactive
    oxygen species (ROS).

7
Anaerobic and Aerobic Respiration
8
ROS production during respiration
  • O2 e- gt O2- superoxide
    anion
  • O2- e- 2H gt H2O2 hydrogen
    peroxide
  • H2O2 e- H gt H2O OH. Hydroxyl
    radical
  • OH. e- H gt H2O water

9
  • Organisms that use O2 have developed defence
    mechanisms to protect themselves from these toxic
    forms of oxygen - enymes
  • Catalase H2O2 H2O2 gt 2H2O O2
  • Peroxidase H2O2 NADH H gt 2H2O
    NAD
  • Superoxide dismutase O2- O2- 2H gt H2O2
    O2

10
Oxygen tolerance of bacteria is dependent on
which of these enzymes they possess.
11
Anaerobic environments
  • Anaerobic environments (low reduction potential)
    include
  • Sediments of lakes, rivers and oceans bogs,
    marshes, flooded soils, intestinal tract of
    animals oral cavity of animals, deep undrground
    areas, e.g. oil packets and some aquifers
  • Anaerobes also important in some infections, e.g.
    C. tetanii and C. perfringens important in deep
    puncture wound infections

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  • Also microaerophiles like Campylobacter jejuni
    very important in medial terms
  • For proper diagnosis and for studies of anaerobic
    environments culture techniques are desirable

15
  • Culture of anaerobes is extremely difficult due
    to the need to exclude oxygen, slow growth and
    complex growth requirements
  • Molecular methods based on DNA analysis and
    direct microscopy have shown that we are largely
    ignorant of the microbial world and previously
    unknown diversity has been discovered

16
Microbial Numbers in Natural Environments
17
Culture methods
  • Anaerobes differ in their sensitivity to oxygen
    and the culture methods employed reflect this -
    some are simple and suitable for less sensitive
    organisms, others more complex but necessary for
    fastidious anaerobes
  • Vessels filled to the top with culture medium can
    be used for organisms not too sensitive

18
  • Most common adaptation of media is the addition
    of a reducing agent, e.g. thioglycollate,
    cysteine
  • Acts to reduce the oxygen to water, brings down
    the redox potential -300mV or less.
  • Can add a redox indicator such as rezazurin, pink
    in the presence of oyxgen - colourless in its
    absence

19
  • Deep culture tubes can be used to test whether an
    unknown organism is anaerobic/facultative or
    aerobic
  • Thioglycollate added to culture medium, oxygen
    only found near top where it can diffuse from air
    -pattern of colony formation characteristic of
    organisms

20
Redox potential
500 mV
- 300 mV
21
  • Pyrogallic acid-sodium hydroxide method can be
    used, again relies on a chemical reaction to
    generate an anaerobic environment, but a catalyst
    rather than a reducing agent
  • Anaerobic jars (GasPak System) are sued to
    incubate plates in an anaerobic atmosphere,
    useful if brief exposure to oxygen is not lethal

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P. aeruginosa Strict aerobe
Enterococcus Facultative Grows aerobic or
anaerobic.
Bacteriodes fragilis
25
Culture of strict anaerobes
  • For culture of strict anaerobes all traces of
    oxygen must be removed from medium and for many
    organisms sample must be kept entirely anaerobic
    during manipulations
  • Methanogenic archaea from rumen and sewage
    treatment plants killed by even a brief exposure
    to O2
  • Medium usually boiled during preparation and
    reducing agent added, stored under O2-free
    atmosphere

26
  • Manipulations usually carried out under a jet of
    O2-free N2 or N2/CO2 to exclude O2
  • Roll-tube (Hungate) method often used instead of
    conventional plates for isolation and culture of
    strict anaerobes

27
1.Exclude oxygen by flushing the tube with the
desired gas 2. Place 4.5ml of pre-reduced
anaerobic agar medium into tube 3. Seal the tube
with the butyl rubber stopper and screw
cap 4.Autoclave the tube 5.Inoculate with a
syringe 6.Prepare on roll tube
spinner 7.Incubate in water bath
28
  • Use of anaerobic cabinet/glove box allows
    conventional bacteriological techniques e.g.
    replica plating, antibiotic sensitivity testing
    etc. to be carried out anaerobically

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