I isolated a colony from the autoclave handle in the lab, using TSA
plates. It looked layered (like a medium sized pizza on top of a large
pizza) with rough edges.
Gram stain came out positive and rod shaped, malachite green stain
showed spores.
I subcultured this colony onto blood agar and lactobacillus MRS agar.
Blood agar showed clearing, but I can't remember if it was under the
colonies or around it as well (thats the difference between alpha and
beta hemolysis, right?), MRS showed very structured colonies, having a
few wormlike or vertical projections.
So I know (i think) its a Bacillus, but how do I determine what
species it is? We use B. subtilis in these labs, and I saw a picture
indicating the 3D/worm-like growth being attributed to B. subtilis.
--
Nathan McCorkle
Rochester Institute of Technology
College of Science, Biotechnology/Bioinformatics
Blood clearing is based on colour rather than radius, I think.
Bacilli are really awkward to tell apart, I had a scanned id chart lying around on my HD, I'll search tomorrow. You'll be getting into anaerobic or not, sugar metabolism, etc..
Yes, but I think its out of the timeframe I have now... I could
subculture onto all the different media that we have, but I feel
that's a less intelligent/directed way to approach it, rather I still
wouldn't know /how/ to use those results for categorization.
Thanks, will try to find it.
Sweet, post here or email me if/when you find it!
My roommate (also in class with me) found (some of?) these, thanks Patrik!
> Here's a great identification flowchart, extracted from the dozens and
> dozens of tables in the book:
>
> http://www.uiweb.uidaho.edu/micro_biology/250/IDFlowcharts.pdf
>
Yeah I found this my first or second google search in lab this past
Sunday, the first chart basically got me to think its a Bacillus... I
think we'll proceed to the more in-depth biochemical tests this week
and next.
> If you already have a good idea which organism it may be (e.g. B.
> subtilis), you may want to get out the big guns, and check Bergey's
> Manual of *Systematic* Bacteriology, which will have a lot more
> information of specific species phenotypes, beyond merely what is
> essential for identifying the species.
>
> Of course, nowadays the gold standard would be to sequence the 16S
> rDNA, and use that to identify the organism down to the strain level.
>
I was thinking that colony PCR is really quite easy, are there
universal primers for 16S? I could get some in the mail in a few days
for not more than $5-$15... not sure if I really need that level
though, since I think this Prof is a "very very fair" grader.
>
> On Oct 5, 1:34 pm, Nathan McCorkle <nmz...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> So in my 5th year studying Biotech I'm taking Microbiology, though its
>> a 2nd or 3rd year course!!!
>>
>> I isolated a colony from the autoclave handle in the lab, using TSA
>> plates. It looked layered (like a medium sized pizza on top of a large
>> pizza) with rough edges.
>>
>> Gram stain came out positive and rod shaped, malachite green stain
>> showed spores.
>>
>> I subcultured this colony onto blood agar and lactobacillus MRS agar.
>> Blood agar showed clearing, but I can't remember if it was under the
>> colonies or around it as well (thats the difference between alpha and
>> beta hemolysis, right?), MRS showed very structured colonies, having a
>> few wormlike or vertical projections.
>>
>> So I know (i think) its a Bacillus, but how do I determine what
>> species it is? We use B. subtilis in these labs, and I saw a picture
>> indicating the 3D/worm-like growth being attributed to B. subtilis.
>>
>> --
>> Nathan McCorkle
>> Rochester Institute of Technology
>> College of Science, Biotechnology/Bioinformatics
>
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Yeah we'll go through there, as well as decarboxylase test, and maybe
some others
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On Oct 6, 2011 5:55 PM, "Patrik" <pat...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Oct 6, 12:00 am, Nathan McCorkle <nmz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > I was thinking that colony PCR is really quite easy, are there
> > universal primers for 16S? I could get some in the mail in a few days
> > for not more than $5-$15... not sure if I really need that level
> > though, since I think this Prof is a "very very fair" grader.
>
> JGI typically uses universal primers 27F/1391R for bacterial 16S rRNA:
>
> http://my.jgi.doe.gov/general/protocols/SOP_16S18S_rRNA_PCR_Library_Creation.pdf
>
Thanks, will have a look
> The Wikipedia page actually has a table with universal primers as
> well:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16S_ribosomal_RNA#Universal_Primers
>
Yeah wasn't sure if the amplicons were so long such that you needed to use each primer in that table, then assemble and BLAST.
Would I look for best hit with score < 10^-20?
> 16S is such a common target in microbiology, that chances are somebody
> at your lab may have some primers available that you could use. Ask
> around among the grad students and postdocs...
>
No grads or post-docs here in bio... But i'll ask a few profs, or just buy some from sigma, shouldn't be more than $15
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I'm waiting on my registration on biomerieux to see pricing now.
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