Introduction:
A spread plate was different from a drop or pour plate, the basic process required spreading the bacteria over the agar plate in order to separate the bacteria colonies and allowed to easily view the differences in between colonies such as size, shape, elevation, texture, light transmission and colony pigmentation. The spread plate was also useful for determining the concentration of the original mixture. Individual bacterial were very difficult to see when spread concentrated solution of bacterial culture on agar surface, the serial dilution were used to dilute the amount of bacterial culture in each agar plate, so the last plate should have small amount of bacteria, isolated colonies that can be easily counted or studied. A good method of spread plating involves the use of the glass rod bent in an “L” shape. The micropipette can be used to transfer the amount of cell culture onto the surface of agar in the plates. Once the amount of cell culture is transferred on the center of the agar on the plates, the L-rod can be used to spread the liquid across the surface. Colonies should then grow comfortably across the entire plate surface. A colony of bacteria is made up of millions of identical bacterial cells each original from one single cell.
Materials:
Micropipettes P200, P1000 with rack, microfuge tubes with rack, micropipette disposable tips, tips disposable cup, acetone burner, lighter, agar plates, L-rod, alcohol breaker, ethanol (70% EtOH), sterile distilled water (dH2O), water bath, Vortex genie and stock bacterial culture tube.
Methods:
Labeled the bottom of each agar plate with name, date, culture name and 1 (1:10), 2 (1:100), 3 (1:1,000), 4 (1:10,000), 5 (1:100,000), 6 (1:1,000,000). Labeled microfuge tubes with the number and diluted ratio above. Set micropipette P1000 to the volume desired 900 μl, inserted disposable tip, lighted acetone burner, opened sterile dH2O cap, passed the lip and cap through the flame, and then dispensed 900 μl to all six microfuge tubes and then discarded tip to the disposable cup. Set micropipette P200 to volume desired 100μl, then took stock bacterial culture tube to vortex well, inserted disposable tip, opened stock bacterial culture tube, passed through the flame and transferred 100μl from stock bacterial culture to tube 1 and took it to vortex well, then opened tube 1 and passed through the flame and used the same micropipette P200 to transfer 100μl to tube2. Applied the same steps as tube 1 to tube2, tube 2 to tube 3, tube3 to tube 4, tube 4 to tube 5 and tube 5 to tube 6 using the same volume 100μl to dispense. Filled little alcohol into the breaker, opened tube1 and used same micropipette P200 to transfer 100μl from tube 1 to agar plate 1 by left hand hold the agar plate and opened good enough for pipetting while right hand hold micropipette, then took the L-rod to dip into alcohol in breaker and passed through the flame, let cool down, and then spread lightly on agar surface, made sure to spread cover all the agar surface, took out the L-rod and closed the lid at the same time, dipped the L-rod in alcohol and passed through the flame, then sealed with parafilm and put it upside down on other table. Applied the same steps on agar plate 1 to finished plate 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 labeled on the plates, made sure tube 2 to plate 2, tube 3 to plate 3, tube 4 to plate 4, tube 5 to plate 5 and tube 6 to plate 6. After finished all six sample plates, placed all upside down into water bath and set 37°C temperature, allowed to incubate about 16 to 18 hours. Compared the sample plates from plate 1 to plate 6 to identify and isolated colonies between each plate.
Results / Calculations:
Prepared 1ml of 1:10, 1:100, 1:1000, 1:10000, 1:100000, 1:1000000 serial dilution using bacterial culture stock solution.
Figure: The different between each bacterial culture plates after incubation.
The number of bacteria was reduced by dilution before the bacterial culture was spread on the surface of the nutrient agar plate after 16 to 18 hours incubation, the culture plate #6 had more bacterial isolated colonies than other culture plates. The culture plates #1, 2, 3, and 4 did not have any bacterial isolated colony; culture plate #5 had some isolated colonies. The bacterial isolated colonies were small circular size, margin entire, elevation raised, texture smooth, translucent and white color.
Conclusion / Discussion:
Successfully learned how to use the technique of spread plate and serial dilution to isolate individual bacterial colonies on a nutrient agar plate. The basic of obtaining isolated colonies were reduction the number of bacteria per unit volume by dilution. The culture plate #6 had higher number of bacterial isolated colonies than other culture plates. It is important when prepared to make the serial dilution, make sure to mix well the culture stock solution before use to dispense.
References:
Basic Biotechnology Laboratory Manual by BioHealth College, Inc.
Basic Biotechnology Laboratory Manual by BioHealth College, Inc.