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Trace amounts of furan-2-carboxylic acids determine the quality of solid agar plates for bacterial culture.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Many investigators have recognised that a significant proportion of environmental bacteria exist in a viable but non-culturable state on agar plates, and some researchers have also noticed that some of such bacteria clearly recover their growth on matrices other than agar. However, the reason why agar is unsuitable for the growth of some bacteria has not been addressed.

Methodology/principal findings

According to the guide of a bioassay for swarming inhibition, we identified 5-hydroxymethylfuran-2-carboxylic acid (5-HMFA) and furan-2-carboxylic acid (FA) as factors that inhibit bacterial swarming and likely inhibit extracellular polysaccharide production on agar. The furan-2-carboxylic acids 5-HMFA and FA effectively inhibited the swarming and swimming of several environmental bacteria at concentrations of 1.8 and 2.3 µg L(-1) (13 and 21 nmol L(-1)), respectively, which are equivalent to the concentrations of these compounds in 0.3% agar. On Luria-Bertani (LB) plates containing 1.0% agar that had been previously washed with MeOH, a mixture of 5-HMFA and FA in amounts equivalent to their original concentrations in the unwashed agar repressed the swarming of Escherichia coli K12 strain W3110, a representative swarming bacterium.

Conclusions/significance

Agar that contains trace amounts of 5-HMFA and FA inhibits the proliferation of some slow-growing or difficult-to-culture bacteria on the plates, but it is useful for single colony isolation due to the ease of identification of swarmable bacteria as the non-swarmed colonies.

SUBMITTER: Hara S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3407156 | biostudies-literature | 2012

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Trace amounts of furan-2-carboxylic acids determine the quality of solid agar plates for bacterial culture.

Hara Shintaro S   Isoda Reika R   Tahvanainen Teemu T   Hashidoko Yasuyuki Y  

PloS one 20120727 7


<h4>Background</h4>Many investigators have recognised that a significant proportion of environmental bacteria exist in a viable but non-culturable state on agar plates, and some researchers have also noticed that some of such bacteria clearly recover their growth on matrices other than agar. However, the reason why agar is unsuitable for the growth of some bacteria has not been addressed.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>According to the guide of a bioassay for swarming inhibition, we ident  ...[more]

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