Author:
Ferreira J L,Hamdy M K,Zapatka F A,Hebert W O
Abstract
A simple gel immunodiffusion agar procedure was developed for detecting toxigenic strains of Clostridium botulinum type A. The method consisted of overlaying colonies grown on thin-layer tryptone-peptone-glucose-yeast extract agar with gel diffusion agar containing desired levels of C. botulinum type A antitoxin. Concentric precipitin zones formed around colonies of C. botulinum type A. Strains of C. botulinum type A were detected by this procedure. However, C. botulinum type B reacted to a lesser degree with this system. No reaction was noted with types E, F, Langeland, F8G, Clostridium perfringens, or with strains of nontoxigenic Clostridium sporogenes. Thickness of the plating medium, incubation time and temperature, environmental growth conditions, and levels of both agar an antitoxin were important factors affecting the efficiency of the procedure, whereas the age of the culture (used as inoculum) was not critical. Thin agar medium (5 ml per plate [15 by 100 mm]) containing 1.5% agar gave consistent results, but more agar limited diffusion, and lower levels encouraged spreaders. The optimal concentration of antitoxin incorporated in to the gel diffusion agar overlay was 1.2 IU/ml gel diffusion agar. Rabbit type A antitoxin prepared with purer immunizing agent gave similar reactions. The addition of type A antitoxin in tryptone-peptone-glucose-yeast extract agar medium before inoculation with type A C. botulinum showed promising results.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
18 articles.
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