Affiliation:
1. Clinical Microbiology Laboratory, Attikon University Hospital, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Double-layer agar (DLA) overlay plaque assay is the gold standard for phage enumeration. However, it is cumbersome and time-consuming. Given the great interest in phage therapy, we explored alternative assays for phage quantitation. A total of 16 different phages belonging to Myoviridae, Siphoviridae, and Podoviridae families were quantitated with five
K
.
pneumoniae,
eight
P
.
aeruginosa,
and three
A
.
baumannii
host isolates. Phages were quantitated with the standard DLA assay (10 mL of LB soft agar 0.7% on LB hard agar 1.5%) and the new single-layer agar (SLA) assay (10 mL of LB soft agar 0.7%) with phages spread (spread) into or spotted (spot) onto soft agar. Phage concentrations with each assay were correlated with the standard assay, and the relative and absolute differences between each assay and the standard double-layer agar spread were calculated. Phage concentrations 1 × 10
4
–8.3 x10
12
PFU/mL with the standard DLA assay were quantitated with SLA-spread, SLA-spot, and DLA-spot assays, and the median (range) relative and absolute differences were <10% and <0.98 log
10
PFU/mL, respectively, for all phage/bacterial species (ANOVA
P
= 0.1–0.43), and they were highly correlated (r > 0.77,
P
< 0.01). Moreover, plaques could be quantified at 37°C after 4-h incubation for
K. pneumoniae
phages and 6-h incubation for
P. aeruginosa
and
A. baumannii
phages, and estimated concentrations remained the same over 24 hours. Compared to DLA assay, the SLA-spot assay required less media, it was 10 times faster, and generated same-day results. The SLA-spot assay was cheaper, faster, easier to perform, and generated similar phage concentrations as the standard DLA-spread assay.
Funder
Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology