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Potato Dextrose Agar Plate, 245 x 245, Sterile, 4 pack Cat. No. P0049 teknova.com | Z Plates,Left Z Plates,Right Z Plates,Stainless Steel Z Plates,Titanium indianorthopaedic.com |
For information on agar plate preparation, please visit the Wikibooks Agar Plate page.
An agar plate is a sterile Petri dish that contains a growth medium (typically agar plus nutrients) used to culture microorganisms or small plants like the moss Physcomitrella patens. Selective growth compounds may also be added to the media, such as antibiotics.[1] Individual microorganisms placed on the plate will grow into individual colonies, each a clone genetically identical to the individual ancestor organism (except for the low, unavoidable rate of mutation). Thus, the plate can be used either to estimate the concentration of organisms in a liquid culture or a suitable dilution of that culture using a colony counter, or to generate genetically pure cultures from a mixed culture of genetically different organisms, using a technique known as "streaking". In this technique, a drop of the culture on the end of a thin, sterile loop of wire, sometimes known as an inoculator, is streaked across the surface of the agar leaving organisms behind, a higher number at the beginning of the streak and a lower number at the end. At some point during a successful "streak", the number of organisms deposited will be such that distinct individual colonies will grow in that area which may be removed for further culturing, using another sterile loop.[1]
[edit] HistoryIn 1881, Fannie Hesse, the wife of a technician in the laboratory of Robert Koch, suggested agar as an effective setting agent since it had been common place in jam making for some time.[2] [edit] Types of agar plates An agar plate being viewed in an electronic colony counter. Like other growth media, the formulations of agar used in plates may be classified as either "defined" or "undefined"; defined medium is synthesized from individual chemicals required by the organism so that the exact molecular composition is known, whereas undefined medium is made from natural products such as yeast extract, where the precise composition is unknown.[3] Agar plates may be formulated as either permissive, with the intent of allowing the growth of whatever organisms are present, or restrictive or selective, with the intent of only allowing growth a particular subset of those organisms.[4] This may take the form of a nutritional requirement, for instance providing a particular compound such as lactose as the only source of carbon and thereby selecting only organisms which can metabolize that compound, or by including a particular antibiotic or other substance in order to select only organisms which are resistant to that substance. This correlates to some degree with defined and undefined media; undefined media, made from natural products and containing an unknown combination of very many organic molecules, is typically more permissive in terms of supplying the needs of a wider variety of organisms, while defined media can be precisely tailored to select organisms with specific properties. Agar plates may also be indicator plates, in which the organisms are not selected on the basis of growth, but are instead distinguished by a color change in some colonies, typically caused by the action of an enzyme on some compound added to the media. Some commonly used agar plate types are: Red blood cells on an agar plate are used to diagnose infection. On the left is a positive Staphylococcus infection, on the right a positive Streptococcus culture. [edit] Blood agar types
Contains meat extract, tryptone, sodium chloride, and agar.
[edit] General bacterial media
Aspergillus niger growing in potato dextrose agar
[edit] Fungal media
[edit] Moss media
[edit] References
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
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