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• Enrichment media: It’s a liquid medium, used to increase the relative concentration of
certain microbes before culturing them on a solid medium plate. It’s used as a broth
medium and inhibits the growth of commensal species of microorganisms (those who live
in close association with each other) in the clinical specimen.
It’s also used in isolating fecal and soil microorganisms. Examples are selenite F broth
which is used to isolate Salmonella typhi from a fecal sample, tetrathionate broth, and
alkaline peptone water.
• Differential or indicator media: It contains certain indicators like dyes or metabolic
substrates in the medium composition which gives different colors to colonies of different
microbial species when they utilize or react with these components.
It allows the growth of more than one microorganism, however, the bacterial colonies are
differentiated based on their color when a chemical change occurs in the indicator, such as
neutral red, phenol red, methylene blue. Examples are:
• Blood agar: In blood agar, three types of blood cell lysis or hemolysis are
observed: alpha, beta, and gamma hemolysis. It allows the growth of many
microorganisms, however, their ability to lyse blood cells differs, and this helps to
distinguish the bacterial colonies. For example, S. pyogenes completely lyse blood
cells (beta hemolysis), thus causing total clearing of the media around its
colonies. S. pneumoniae partially lyse red blood cells, resulting in a greenish-
colored medium, while gamma hemolytic microorganisms like Enterococcus
faecalis, Staphylococcus saprophyticus, and Staphylococcus epidermidis, can’t
lyse red blood cells, thus causing no color change in the medium.
• Mannitol salts agar: The fermentation of mannitol by Staphylococcus
aureus causes the media to change to yellow, however, coagulase-negative
staphylococci that can’t cause fermentation to appear in pink.
• MacConkey agar: It differentiates the gram-negative bacteria based on their
lactose metabolism. The lactose fermenting bacteria, such as Escherichia coli,
Klebsiella spp, Citrobacter, and Enterobacter forms pink-red colonies, while
lactose non-fermenters, like Salmonella, Shigella, Proteus, Providencia,
Pseudomonas, and Morganella form pale or colorless colonies.
• Thiosulfate citrate bile salts sucrose (TCBS) agar: The media contain sucrose,
which is utilized by ferment microbes and helps to distinguish them from non-
ferment microorganisms. Based on this characteristic, different colored bacterial
colonies are formed on the media that help to identify and distinguish them from
each other. For example, V. cholerae ferment the sucrose and form slightly
flattened yellow colonies having opaque centers and translucent peripheries.
Whereas, V. parahaemolyticus can’t ferment the sucrose and forms green to blue-
green colonies.
• Xylose-lysine-desoxycholate (XLD) agar: Xylose-lysine-desoxycholate agar is a
selective and differential medium used for the isolation and differentiation of
enteric pathogens from clinical specimens. This medium is more supportive of
fastidious enteric organisms such as Shigella. For Salmonella, which contains the
lysine enzyme, this reaction reverts the pH to an alkaline state and the colony
appears to be transparent or red with a black center. A number of other similar
media for isolation of enteric pathogens exist, including xylose-galactosidase
medium, which is more specific for Aeromonas spp.
• Transport media: Transport media are useful for clinical specimens which are required
to be transferred immediately to labs to maintain the viability of potential pathogens and
to prevent overgrowth of commensals or contaminating microorganisms. Some of them are
semi-solid in consistency, and examples include:
• Sach’s buffered glycerol saline: It’s used to transport feces from patients
suspected to be suffering from bacillary dysentery.
• Cary Blair transport and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan media: Fecal samples
collected from suspected cholera patients are transported using these media.
• Pike’s medium: A throat specimen containing Streptococci is transported using
this medium.
• Anaerobic media: This media is for anaerobic bacteria which require low oxygen levels,
extra nutrients, and reduced oxidation-reduction potential. It is supplemented with hemin
and vitamin K nutrients and oxygen is removed by boiling it in a water bath and sealing it
with paraffin film. Examples are: Thioglycollate broth and Robertson Cooked Meat (RCM)
medium which is commonly used to grow Clostridium spp.
• Storage media: It’s used to store microorganisms for a longer period, examples are chalk
cooked meat broth and egg saline medium.
Types of special purpose culture media
1. Assay media
The media assay vitamins, amino acids, and antibiotics. Example- Antibiotic sensitivity test the
media used is Muller-Hinton agar has 1.7% agar for better diffusion of antibiotics. It also contains
starch, which absorbs toxins released by bacteria. In this media plate Zone of inhibition is seen
around antibiotics.
2. Minimal media
Principal of minimal media
Minimal media is a defined medium with different compositions depending on microorganisms
cultured. It contains a carbon source like sugar/succinate and inorganic salts like magnesium,
nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorus. Carbon is a source of energy; magnesium and ammonium salts are
the sources of ions for metabolism stimulation. Phosphate is a buffering agent.
The growth comparison of microbe culture and mutant forms- Minimal media and supplementary-
minimal media- allow the differentiation of wild-type and mutant cells.
Use- The selection of recombinants, for the growth of wild-type microorganisms.
3. Fermentation media
The media is for optimum microorganisms. Fermentation media produce high yields of the
product; media provide energy and nutrients for growth, and medium gives the substrate for the
synthesis of products in the fermentation.
Fermentation media contains major and minor components-
Major components – Carbon and nitrogen for energy.
Minor components- This contains inorganic salts, growth factors, vitamins, buffer, anti-foaming
agents, dissolved oxygen, gases, growth inhibitors, enzymes.
The nutrients in fermentation media depend on the organism and type of fermentation process.
Two uses-
Growth media
It has low nutrients and creates raw material for further fermentation.
Fermentation media
It has high nutrients and creates end products.
Example- The yeast requires 1% carbon, but the fermentation of alcohol, demands 12-13% carbon
in the medium.
Role of fermentation media
The media has a high level of nutrients, microorganisms, and optimum conditions. During the
incubation period under optimum conditions, microorganisms undergo metabolism. Fermentation
organisms become hyperactive due to nutrients being in high quantities and, the result is nutrients
getting consumed, media partially degraded.
The waste effluent is the output product. The death of cells occurs if substrate-level reaches the
inhibitory concentration and excess substrate causes them to inhibit vital enzymes. Excess
substrate increases osmotic pressure and disturbs enzymatic activity in cells. Microbes release
excess substrate as partially digested fermentation media and convert it into the insoluble inert
compound as reserve food, which is harmless to cells. Example- yeast extract, beef extract,
BMGY.
Application of culture media
• To culture microbes.
• To identify the cause of infection.
• To identify characteristics of microorganisms.
• To isolate pure culture.
• To store the culture stock.
• To observe biochemical reactions.
• To test microbial contamination in any sample.
• To check antimicrobial agents and preservatives effect.
• To observe microbe colony type, its color, shape, cause.
• To differentiate between different colonies.
• To create antigens for laboratory use.
• To estimate viable count.
• To test antibiotic sensitivity.
Limitations of culture media
• Risk of cross-contamination.
• High skill required for optimal results.
• Increased drying out of media can occur.
Conclusion
Culture media is a source of nutrients and growth factors required for the growth of
microorganisms and even plants in laboratory conditions. Every organism has different nutritional
requirements based on its habitat or living conditions. Therefore, a single formulation of culture
media can’t be used to grow all organisms in labs.
Many types of culture media have been developed by scientists to grow selective or desired
microorganisms. These are classified based on their nutrient composition, consistency, and
application or use in life science laboratories.
Culture media serve several purposes in labs like isolating specific strains of microorganisms,
identifying disease-causing pathogens, preparing pure culture of a microbial species,
distinguishing bacterial species, and studying their responses to certain antibiotics.
Thus, before deciding which culture media to use, it is critical to determine the purpose of your
study and in some cases the type of microorganism you want to study. This narrows down your
choices and helps you to choose which media is best for your experiment, without wasting your
time and effort.
References:
1. Tankeshwar Acharya (2021). Bacterial Culture Media: Classification, Types, Uses.
Retrieved from https://microbeonline.com/types-of-bacteriological-culture-medium/.
2. Fatima Aiman (2022). Microbial Culture Media- Definition, Types, Examples, Uses.
Retrieved from https://microbenotes.com/types-of-culture-media/#application-of-culture-
media.
3. Rao Sridhar. Bacterial Culture Media. Retrieved
from https://www.microrao.com/micronotes/pg/culture_media.pdf.
4. Aryal Sagar (2022). Salmonella Shigella (SS) Agar- Composition, Principle, Preparation,
Results, Uses. Retrieved from https://microbenotes.com/salmonella-shigella-ss-agar/.