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Protocol for Urease Test:

Stuart’s Urea Broth :

Ingredient:
Yeast extract:  0.1 g
Potassium phosphate, monobasic:  9.1 g
Potassium phosphate, dibasic: 9.5 g
Urea: 20 g
Phenol red: 0.01 g

Ø Dissolve all ingredients in 1 liter of distilled water and filter sterilize (0.45-mm pore size). Distribute 3 ml of prepared broth per sterile tube (13 x 100 mm). Prepared media will have a yellow-orange color. Store the prepared broth in the refrigerator at 4 to 8oC until needed. Do not heat the medium as the urea will decompose.

Procudure:
  • Use a heavy inoculum from an 18- to 24-hour pure culture to inoculate the broth. Shake the tube gently to suspend the bacteria. Incubate tubes with loosened caps at 35oC. Observe the broth for a color change at 8, 12, 24, and 48 hours. Urease production is indicated by a bright pink (fuchsia) color throughout the broth.

  • Rapidly urease-positive Proteeae (Proteus spp., Morganella morganii, and some Providencia stuartiistrains) for which this medium is differential, will produce a strong positive reaction as early as 8 hours, but always within 48 hours of incubation. Delayed-positive organisms (e.g., Enterobacter) will not produce a positive reaction due to the high buffering capacity of this medium.
    Urease Test


Protocol For Spore Staining 
(Schaeffer-Fulton method for staining endospores)


Ø  Air dry and heat fix the organism on a glass slide

Ø  cover the slide with a blotting paper or toweling cut to fit the slide.

Ø  Saturate the blotting paper with malachite green stain solution and steam for 5 minutes
Ø  Keep the paper moist by adding more dye as required.  Alternatively, the slide may be steamed over a container of boiling water.

Ø  Wash the slide in tap water.

Ø  Counterstain with safranin for 30 seconds. 
Ø  Wash with tap water; blot dry.
Ø  Examine the slide under the oil immersion lens (1,000X) for the presence of endospores. 
Endospores are bright green and vegetative cells are brownish red to pink.  

Spore staining for bacterial cells

Reagents For Spore Staining:
Malachite green stain  (0.5% (wt/vol) aqueous solution)

0.5 g of malachite green
100 ml of distilled water

Decolorizing agent

Tap water

Safranin counterstain

  Stock solution
 (2.5% (wt/vol) alcoholic solution)
    2.5 g of safranin O
    100 ml of 95% ethanol

   Working solution
   10 ml of stock solution
   90 ml of distilled water   


Protocol for catalase and Oxidase test for bacterial cells

1.     Catalase Test:

Procedure:
1.      Transfer a small amount of bacterial colony to a surface of clean, dry glass slide using a loop or sterile wooden stick
2.      Place a drop of 3% H2O2 on to the slide and mix.
3.      A positive result is the rapid evolution of oxygen (within 5-10 sec.) as evidenced by bubbling.
4.      A negative result is no bubbles or only a few scattered bubbles.
5.      Dispose of your slide in the biohazard glass disposal container.


Reagent:
1.      3% H2O2
-Take 1 ml 30-35% H2O2 and add 9 ml D/w.
Catalse test


2.     Oxidase Test:

Procedure: (Wet Filter Method)
1.    A strip of filter paper is soaked with a little freshly made 1% solution of tertramethyl-p-phenylene-diamine dihydrochloride reagent.
2.    A speck of culture is rubbed on it with a platinum loop.
3.    A positive reaction is indicated by an intense deep-purple hue, appearing within 5-10 seconds, a “delayed positive” reaction by colouration in 10-60 seconds, and a negative reaction by absence of colouration or by colouration later than 60 seconds.
 
Oxidase test

Procedure: (Dry Filter Method)
1.    Strip of Whatman’s No. 1 filter paper are soaked in a freshly prepared 1% solution of tertramethyl-p-phenylene-diamine dihydrochloride.
2.    After draining for about 30 seconds, the strips are freeze dried and stored in a dark bottle tightly sealed with a screw cap.
3.    For use, a strip is removed, laid in a petri dish and moistened with distilled water.
4.    The colony to be tested is picked up with a platinum loop and smeared over the moist area.
5.    A positive reaction is indicated by an intense deep-purple hue, appearing within 5-10 seconds, a “delayed positive” reaction by colouration in 10-60 seconds, and a negative reaction by absence of colouration or by colouration later than 60 seconds.

Reagents: 1% tetramethyl-p-phenylene-diamine dihydrochloride
-1 g tetramethyl-p-phenylene-diamine dihydrochloride and add 100 ml d/w



Protocol for Polyamine Analysis in Bacterial Cells:

1.Extraction & Dansylation  (Derivatization):
·         Take approx. 40 mg of lyophilized cells in a tube.
·         Extract (Hydrolysed) with 1 ml of 0.2 M Perchloric Acid (HClO4).
·         Add internal standard 1, 8-diaminooctane (25 µmol/40 mg of cells) (Required Usually for HPLC, for TLC =????)
·         Incubate at 1000C for 30 min. with occasional shaking after 15 min. interval.
·         After extraction the samples were centrifuged, at 8000 rpm for 10 min.
·         Transfer 0.2 ml of supernatant to a tube containing 0.3 ml of Na2CO3solution (100 mg/ml) and 0.8 ml of dansylchloride solution (7.5mg/ml in acetone).
·         The tube was closed tightly & dansylation was performed by incubating the tube for 20 min at 600C (usually in dark condition).
·         Add 0.1 ml of proline solution (50 mg/ml) to bind excessive dansyl chloride. Incubate for 10 min. at 600C.
(Usually the volume can be adjusted as;
Supernatant (Samples) : Na2CO3 : Dansylchloride : Proline = 0.4 ml : 1.2 ml : 3.2 ml : 0.4 ml)
·         Cool in refrigerator (at 4-50C)
·         Add 200-500 µl of toluene and shake or vortex for 30 sec.
·         Centrifuge if required to separate toluene phase from aqueous phase.
Ø  Toluene Extract can be analyzed either by HPLC or TLC.



2.For TLC:

Ø  The solvent cyclohexane/ethylacetate (2:3) (usually 100 ml) must be prepared some hours before chromatography & placed in tank for saturation.
(Chloform/triethylamine , 4:1 v/v may also be use as solvet)
Ø  Take TLC Plate (silica gel 60,20 X 20 cm; Merck Cat. No. 105553).
Ø  Samples & Standards are loaded in the application Zone by using micropipette. Generally 10-40 µl of each toluene extract are applied. Large volume must be loaded by repeated applications of small aliquots with solvent evaporation in between increment.
Ø  After loading the sample, the plates are dried & then placed vertically into the chamber dipping the immersion zone into the developing solvent.
Ø  The chamber is then sealed tightly.
Ø  Plates are developed for 40 min. when used cyclohexane/Ethylacetate solvent & for 1 hr. 15 min. is used chloroform/triethylamine solvents.
Ø  Once developed, the plate is removed from the chamber & dried quickly for 10 min. at 600C .
Ø  Spots corresponding to the different amines are visualized under UV light, and identified by comparison to standards.
Ø  When developed in 2:3 (V/V) cyclohexane/ethylacetate, the migration order of the different polyamines is spermine (firstly separated) followed by spermidine, and finally, putrescine and cadaverine (if present) poorly separated.
Ø  When developed in 4:1 (V/V) chloroform/triethylamine, the migration order of the different polyamines is diaminopropane (firstly separated) followed by putrescine, cadaverine, and finally, spermidine and spermine.
Ø  Once visualized, the spot bounders are marked with pencil.


3.For HPLC analysis:

Ø  After the extraction of the dansylated polyamines, 400 ul of the organic phase (the toluene extract) is removed, dried (e.g., under a stream of ) and re-dissolved in 800ul of acetonitrile (which is compatible with the HPLC column). Finally, the samples are passes through a 0.45 pore size syringe filter before injection in HPLC.

4.Preparation of standard solutions:
Ø    Stock solutions of commercial polyamine standards: diaminopropane, putrescine, cadaverine, spermidine and spermine (in the form of hydrochlorides) are prepared at the concentration of 1 mM in water (or in 0.01 N HCl).
Ø    For the HPLC procedure, a stock solution 1 mM of 1,7- diaminoheptane is also prepared. The unnatural amine 1,7 diaminoheptane is used in HPLC as internal reference compound because it resolves well from derivatives of endogenous amines, elutes near amines of interest, and it is stable under storage conditions (Smith and Davies, 1987).
Ø    Working standard solutions for HPLC (0.05 mM) are prepared by 1:20 dilution of the stock [i.e., 50 1 mM stock + 950 (or 0.01 N HCl)].
Ø    Working standard solutions for TLC will be the 1 mM stock solutions, undiluted.
Ø    Standards are stable for at least 2 months if stored at –20 °C in plastic tubes. Plastic containers (e.g., Eppendorf tubes) must be used for storage because polyamines adsorb to the surface of glass (Smith and Davies, 1987).

Dansylation of standards is carried out in the same way described for samples, but consider:

Ø  Polyamine standards for HPLC are prepared by mixing 40 of each 0.05 mM working solutions (diaminopropane, putrescine, cadaverine, 1,7-diaminoheptane, spermidine and spermine), having a final volume of 240 Moreover, 40 µL 1,7-diaminoheptane 0.05 mM are added to each sample before dansylation, as internal reference, thus having equal experimental volumes for samples and
standards.
Ø  Polyamine standards for TLC are prepared by mixing 20 of each 1 mM stock solutions (diaminopropane, putrescine, cadaverine, spermidine and spermine). Final volume of 200 (equal to sample aliquots) is achieved by adding 100 (or HCl 0.1 N). Alternatively, different concentrations of standards can be prepared (e.g., 25, 20, 15, 10 of each 1mM stock + 75, 100, 125, 150 µL water in order to obtain a standard curve for each amine (i.e.,
concentration
vs. fluorescence).
Ø  Dansylation must be performed in the dark since the derivatives are
light sensitive, but dim light in the laboratory is tolerable. Solution of
dansyl chloride in acetone can be stored for 24 h at 4 °C in the dark. After
the dansylation reaction, samples must be kept in the dark or in dark vials.



Fig:HPLC analysis of Putrescine, Spermidine & Spermine
Fig: Polyamine Bands in TLC