Phage typing

A culture of bacteria infected by bacteriophages, the "holes" are areas where the bacteria have been killed by the virus. The culture is 10cm in diameter.

Phage typing is a method used for detecting single strains of bacteria. It is used to trace the source of outbreaks of infections.[1] The viruses that infect bacteria are called bacteriophages ("phages" for short) and some of these can only infect a single strain of bacteria. These phages are used to identify different strains of bacteria within a single species.

A culture of the strain is grown in the agar and dried. A grid is drawn on the base of the petri dish to mark out different regions. Inoculation of each square of the grid is done by a different phage. The phage drops are allowed to dry and are incubated: The susceptible phage regions will show a circular clearing where the bacteria have been lysed, and this is used in differentiation.[2]

References

  1. Baggesen DL, Sørensen G, Nielsen EM, Wegener HC. Phage typing of Salmonella Typhimurium - is it still a useful tool for surveillance and outbreak investigation?. Eurosurveillance. 2010;15(4):19471. PMID 20122382.
  2. Turbadkar SD, Ghadge DP, Patil S, Chowdhary AS, Bharadwaj R (April 2007). "Circulating phage type of Vibrio cholerae in Mumbai". Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology. 25 (2): 177–8. PMID 17582202. doi:10.4103/0255-0857.32738.


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