Screenshot 2023-07-21 at 9.52.32 PM
pdf
keyboard_arrow_up
School
Rowan College of South Jersey, Sewell *
*We aren’t endorsed by this school
Course
242
Subject
Mechanical Engineering
Date
Apr 3, 2024
Type
Pages
8
Uploaded by UltraBookCoyote18
BIOS242 Lab 1 wme J00queyn Call Lab 1: Culture Transfer Techniques Learning Objectives: Identify the importance of aseptic technique in the field of microbiology Apply the concept of aseptic technique and its importance in the field of microbiology. Identify different forms of basic growth media Transfer a pure bacterial culture from one growth media to another, a process called sub- culturing. Introduction: Microorganisms are everywhere in our environment; they are in the air, the soil, on surfaces (fomites), and on and within living things. In a hospital setting, contamination of clinical samples may have an impact on the diagnosis and treatment of patients. Experimental results from pure cultures, which contain a single type of microorganism, can be skewed and produce erroneous results when contaminated with exogenous microorganisms. Unwanted microorganisms can be introduced into samples by direct contact with contaminated surfaces or hands by touching either the growth media or the inner surfaces of the culture tube with objects that have not been sterilized. In addition, microbes in the air can enter tubes and plates of growth media by way of air currents. Thus, aseptic technique is an important concept to learn in the lab and in clinical settings. Aseptic techniques are designed to prevent unwanted microorganisms from contaminating either sterile materials or pure cultures. If bacteria are handled correctly, only the desired organisms will grow on transfer cultures. Using proper aseptic technique, the transfer of a sample from a pure culture will allow only that specific bacterium to grow. This process is called subculturing and is used to maintain the cells as well as keep them in an active growth phase for experiments. In this lab exercise and in future experiments, it is critical to apply aseptic technique to prevent the contamination of pure cultures. The growth and survival of microorganisms require a source of nutrients and a favorable environment. For example, bacteria that grow in the human gut may grow better at body temperature than at room temperature. While some microorganisms have very specific growth requirements, many bacteria can grow in media containing low molecular weight substances derived from powdered beef extract and enzyme derived short chains of amino acids. Cultures can be grown in tubes in a liquid broth medium. Alternatively, the broth can be mixed with agar, a seaweed extract with no nutritional value, to form a semisolid medium. This can be put onto plates or in tubes. In tubes, the agar can either be allowed to harden in the upright position- known as an agar deep or, on a slant, depending on the application.
BIOS242 Lab 1 Name: Slanted tubes of agar provide a larger surface area for growth and are useful for storing specimens for an extended period of time. In contrast, upright agar tubes are used for stab cultures, which can provide information on the organism’s requirement for oxygen. In this laboratory exercise, Serratia marcescens, a bacteria, will be transferred into a broth culture and to slant and upright (stab) agar media. Both transfer loops and transfer needles will be used. Your instructor will demonstrate how to use the transfer loops and transfer needles using aseptic techniques. You will be using a gas burner so remember to keep hair back and hands away from the flame. The following transfers will be made, using aseptic technique. 1. Broth culture to sterile broth 2. Broth culture to sterile slant 3. Broth culture to stab culture 4. Slant culture to sterile broth S. Slant culture to sterile slant 6. Slant culture to sterile stab Materials: Nutrient broth, Nutrient agar slants, Nutrient agar stabs, liquid and slant cultures of Serratia marcescens, inoculating loop, inoculating needle, incinerators Note to Students: 1. You may use metal loops/needles or disposable plastic loops/needles. The instructions may vary based on the type. Please check with your instructor regarding usage and disposal of loops and needles. 2. You may use incinerator or burner with flame to sterilize metal loops and needles. Please check with your instructor regarding how to safely use incinerators or burners to sterilize. Method: 1. Remove extraneous materials from the lab bench and disinfect it with 10% bleach solution. 2. Obtain 24 hour cultures of Serratia marcescens (broth and slant). 3. Label the sterile tubes (broth, slant, and stab) with the name of the organism and your group designation.
BIOS242 Lab 1 Name: 4. Loop sterilization for those labs with reusable metal loops following the instructions below (a and b). If your lab uses sterile plastic loops, use a new loop for each transfer being mindful not to touch it on any surface. a. Sterilize the inoculating loop or needle by holding it in the flame of the gas burner, moving it through until the wire turns red. Allow the inoculating loop or needle to cool for 10 — 20 seconds. Do not wave it in the air or put it down, as it may pick up contaminating bacteria and will no longer be sterile. 5. Transfer from a broth culture to a new broth culture by following the steps outlined in a-h. d. b. g. h. Loosen the cap of the sterile broth tube, but do not remove it completely. Open the tube of broth culture. While holding the cap in your hand (do not put it down, as this action will compromise its sterility) pass the mouth of the tube through the flame a few times. Place the sterilized inoculating loop from step 4 into the culture, being careful not to touch the sides of the tube. Remove the loop, pass the mouth of the tube through the flame again, and cap it. Take the sterile, labeled broth tube, uncap it and flame the mouth of the tube. Insert the inoculating loop with the bacteria sample into the sterile broth and shake it a few times before removing it. Pass the mouth of the tube through the flame and cap it. Metal loops only: Flame the loop until it turns red to sterilize it. 6. Transfer from a broth culture to a slant culture a. b. e. Follow steps Sa — 5d described above. Take a sterile, labeled slant culture, uncap it and flame the mouth of the tube. Insert the inoculating loop with the sample and touch the loop on the surface of the slant. Drag the loop gently across the top of the agar, starting from the bottom of the slant to the top. Be careful not to dig into the agar. Remove the loop, flame the mouth of the slant culture and cap it. Metal loops only: Flame the loop to sterilize it. 7. Transfer from a broth culture to a slab culture
Your preview ends here
Eager to read complete document? Join bartleby learn and gain access to the full version
- Access to all documents
- Unlimited textbook solutions
- 24/7 expert homework help
BIOS242 Lab 1 Name: a. Stab cultures use an inoculating needle instead of a loop. b. Follow steps Sa — 5d described above, using an inoculating needle. c. Take a sterile, labeled stab culture, uncap it and flame the mouth of the tube. d. Insert the needle containing the bacteria into the tube in a straight line and rapidly withdraw it. e. Flame the mouth of the stab culture, recap it, and flame sterile the inoculating needle if you are using a metal needle. 8. Transfer from a slant culture to a broth, slant, or stab culture a. All of the steps described previously are the same, except for obtaining the sample. b. After obtaining the sterile loop, open the cap of the slant culture, flame the mouth of the tube and obtain a sample by gently touching the surface of the slant where there is bacterial growth. c. Remove the loop, flame the mouth of the tube and recap it. d. Once you have the sample, follow the procedures described above to transfer to broth, slant, and stab tubes. 9. When finished, incubate the tubes at approximately 25¢ C for 24 to 48 hours. Next lab class: 10. Examine the cultures for appearance of growth. Broth cultures should appear turbid (cloudy). Slant and stab cultures should have orange-red growth on the surface of the slant and along the line of inoculation in the slant culture. 11. Record your findings in the Lab Report. Lab Report Purpose:
BIOS242 Lab 1 Name: Please describe in complete sentences and in your own words, the purpose of this experiment. e purpose oF Hhis expenment s 1 Studgs NOW boacteyiae GY ows Observations: Broth Stock Culture: tr Broth Subculture | Slant Subculture Stab Subculture Growth (+) + L B + or (-) | Orange-Red i +é T o . qr owth igmentation (+) e | e S t | N 3 Q0 - lbotHom : 5 5 B o Imesaus | \ - o | Visual Growth \ % l . ’ Patterns l | Q\ @- t | \C.s | Y ) i L 1 \@ Y —J A \ \ Slant Stock Culture: \NB)\/O \I\H)Vl [ Broth Subculture Slant Subculture Stab Subculture
BIOS242 Lab 1 Name: Growth (+) i | + Y OWtH o) Al | j‘; a{g\q%m_ OJr'[ | Orange Red [fifi D "k’ o Ay O Plgmentanon (+) NO WQ(\‘\O:“ b ({\Q(\‘\O‘h&\QQD ’ D\(Ofl%\ _— Q\Q \Q\Q P|qm€fl’r J 1 e ‘ - ’ Visual Growth | | Patterns {3 r | | w ) | | | | N Questions: 1. Why is proper aseptic techmque important in microbiology? QUK ' | o101 0g Y D2C ASEPRC fecnnigue 1S IMporfant - MM e ) : 1+ \Ehug, q +o Cross CoN+aminod SamMples J=¥ Lreding dor @ Covtaun m.cro@ (gan\sms_ I ancriner and @ Pasitg 3ou CDLL\O p\(;l< up N N AlSo ue Go not Lont4e be oposed &)f\%&%gaflwm. 2. What is the importance of flaming the inoculating loop or needle before and after each inoculation? SUNED MING MNe l(\DLU\ \onNG 100p 21 S —@3\009 S Stevil€ &m O¥Ney Sourcl ot Hne boackeviok our~€ noJr Contomi noted. 6
Your preview ends here
Eager to read complete document? Join bartleby learn and gain access to the full version
- Access to all documents
- Unlimited textbook solutions
- 24/7 expert homework help
BlOS242 Lab 1 Name: 3. If you do not wait 10 - 20 seconds after flame sterilizing the inoculating instruments before obtaining the sample, what might be the consequences? IF You do not wand 10-20 Seconds, : Jou C%r\ poifmohw% Kl g (Y\\CXOOV%OAD\SYY\. We Ore frging to Agure o whod the Species 1S S0 we nLed it oJuva \n ovdelr 10 o Jo. 4. Why is it important to flame neck of the tubes immediately after uncapping and before recapping the tubes? IS 1340 prevent CYoss contaminahion ONQA the spreact oF e bacreno- W S ON %’O\S%rudq, 5. The stab tube was inoculated with a needle. Why was this used instead of the inoculating loop? The Stab Yube 1S whodr wl use o ook Sor Cev+oan SPeQes - 6. The Serratia marcescens cultures were accidently incubated at 370 C instead of 25¢ C. You observed growth but the slant and stab cultures were white, not orange-red. Does this mean your sample was contaminated? NOE NeCesSovily , BRCASE ANE (NICrO0V oI S chd not produce tne prgment ey £ N arion. tHhere WAS Not £Noug N CLCC = AlS) HNe VoVousS Syucruorion %GEE?:{_‘ A e 7
BIOS242 Lab 1 Name: Grading Rubric: Activity Deliverable Points Experimental Set up | Set up the cultures as directed in the lab or by instructor 4 | Observation Observe the results and record them in lab report 4 ‘} Lab Report and Complete lab report and answer questions 7 Tk Questions * Purpose (1 point) * Questions (6 points) All Lab Deliverables | Complete ALL lab work and lab report 15 |
Related Documents
Related Questions
This problem is (16.23) from a book "Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics An Integrated Approach by M. Scott Shell"
arrow_forward
3. Microfluidic channels will need to be fabricated on a key micro-scale sensor used by aerospace
industries. Before running machining tests and analyzing machined quality, preliminary efforts are needed
to evaluate selected materials and factors affecting machining process¹. Three material candidates have
been selected, including 422SS (stainless steel), IN718 (nickel alloy), and Ti64 (titanium alloy) with their
measured tensile properties and equation of true stress-true strain relationship used listed below. Tref25°C.
Specifically, three factors will need to be evaluated, including different materials, temperature, and size
effect. Please calculate true stress values for true strain ranging between 0-3 for each case listed below.
Material
A (MPa)
& (S-¹)
Tm (°C)
870
0.01
1520
422SS (Peyre et al., 2007)
IN718 (Kobayashi et al., 2008)
Ti64 (Umbrello, 2008)
980
1
1300
782.7
1E-5
1660
Material
422SS (CINDAS, 2011)
IN718 (Davis, 1997)
Ti64 (Fukuhara and Sanpei, 1993)
0 =
X
G (GPa)
1+
B…
arrow_forward
mylabmastering.pearson.com
Chapter 12 - Lecture Notes.pptx: (MAE 272-01) (SP25) DY...
P Pearson MyLab and Mastering
Scores
arrow_forward
Number 3
arrow_forward
You are working in a biology lab during your summer break. Your supervisor asks you to perform an experiment to find the effective spring constant
(in N/m) of a partial molecule of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid). You perform experiments and find that a single straight portion of a DNA molecule is
2.19 μm long. You then perform an activity that charges the ends of the molecule; each end becomes singly ionized: negative on one end, positive on
the other. After the ends are charged, the molecule shrinks by 1.31% of its length.
1.21e-9
arrow_forward
The rapid progress of engineering design and information technology has caused difficulties in analyzing system reliability. Because of the increased complexity in system reliability structure (component/subsystem interfaces), many unexpected failure modes could occur, and their behaviors are interdependent. At a system’s design and development stage, the main challenge in analyzing a complex system is the failure uncertainty introduced by the incomplete knowledge of the system. This makes it hard to decompose system reliability into subsystem/component reliability in a deterministic manner, such as series or parallel systems. As a result, some common reliability analysis tools such as fault tree (FT) and reliability block diagram (RBD) become inadequate. Do you agree, why or why not? Are there any other approaches to system reliability assessment beside these tools at the early system’s design and development stage (what are these approaches)?
arrow_forward
kamihq.com/web/viewer.html?state%=D%7B"ids"%3A%5B"1vSrSXbH_6clkKyVVKKAtzZb_GOMRwrCG"%5D%...
lasses
Gmail
Copy of mom it for..
Маps
OGOld Telephone Ima.
Preview attachmen...
Kami Uploads ►
Sylvanus Gator - Mechanical Advantage Practice Sheet.pdf
rec
Times New Roman
14px
1.5pt
BIUSA
A Xa x* 三三
To find the Mechanical Advantage of ANY simple machine when given the force, use MA = R/E.
1.
An Effort force of 30N is appliled to a screwdriver to pry the lid off of a can of paint. The
screwdriver applies 90N of force to the lid. What is the MA of the screwdriver?
MA =
arrow_forward
Needs Complete typed solution with complete explanation and 100 % accuracy. Don't use chat gpt or any ai
arrow_forward
Q1: You are designing a high-pressure oxygen cylinder for hospitals fighting
against COVID. The material used is layered unidirectional continuous
fiber reinforced composite, as schematically shown in Fig.1 (a). In the 0°
layer, the fiber is along the Y direction, and the fiber is along X direction
in the 90° layer. The thickness of the 90° layer is 1.5 times of that of the 0°
layer. The matrix material is an isotropic material with the Young's
modulus E-10 GPa and volume fraction Vm-20%, while the continuous
fiber is an anisotropic material with the Young's modulus E₁-250 GPa
along the length direction, E2-20 GPa along the transverse direction and
volume fraction V₁-80%
a) Based on rule of mixture and mechanics of material method, calculate the
effective Young's modulus along each direction (Ex, Ey, E₂).
b) The as-produced (unloaded) inner radius Ro-0.1 m, the wall thickness H=0.005
m (<
arrow_forward
Please show step by step work
arrow_forward
answer pls
arrow_forward
use LMTD for part a and b
arrow_forward
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you

Principles of Heat Transfer (Activate Learning wi...
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781305387102
Author:Kreith, Frank; Manglik, Raj M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Related Questions
- This problem is (16.23) from a book "Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics An Integrated Approach by M. Scott Shell"arrow_forward3. Microfluidic channels will need to be fabricated on a key micro-scale sensor used by aerospace industries. Before running machining tests and analyzing machined quality, preliminary efforts are needed to evaluate selected materials and factors affecting machining process¹. Three material candidates have been selected, including 422SS (stainless steel), IN718 (nickel alloy), and Ti64 (titanium alloy) with their measured tensile properties and equation of true stress-true strain relationship used listed below. Tref25°C. Specifically, three factors will need to be evaluated, including different materials, temperature, and size effect. Please calculate true stress values for true strain ranging between 0-3 for each case listed below. Material A (MPa) & (S-¹) Tm (°C) 870 0.01 1520 422SS (Peyre et al., 2007) IN718 (Kobayashi et al., 2008) Ti64 (Umbrello, 2008) 980 1 1300 782.7 1E-5 1660 Material 422SS (CINDAS, 2011) IN718 (Davis, 1997) Ti64 (Fukuhara and Sanpei, 1993) 0 = X G (GPa) 1+ B…arrow_forwardmylabmastering.pearson.com Chapter 12 - Lecture Notes.pptx: (MAE 272-01) (SP25) DY... P Pearson MyLab and Mastering Scoresarrow_forward
- Number 3arrow_forwardYou are working in a biology lab during your summer break. Your supervisor asks you to perform an experiment to find the effective spring constant (in N/m) of a partial molecule of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid). You perform experiments and find that a single straight portion of a DNA molecule is 2.19 μm long. You then perform an activity that charges the ends of the molecule; each end becomes singly ionized: negative on one end, positive on the other. After the ends are charged, the molecule shrinks by 1.31% of its length. 1.21e-9arrow_forwardThe rapid progress of engineering design and information technology has caused difficulties in analyzing system reliability. Because of the increased complexity in system reliability structure (component/subsystem interfaces), many unexpected failure modes could occur, and their behaviors are interdependent. At a system’s design and development stage, the main challenge in analyzing a complex system is the failure uncertainty introduced by the incomplete knowledge of the system. This makes it hard to decompose system reliability into subsystem/component reliability in a deterministic manner, such as series or parallel systems. As a result, some common reliability analysis tools such as fault tree (FT) and reliability block diagram (RBD) become inadequate. Do you agree, why or why not? Are there any other approaches to system reliability assessment beside these tools at the early system’s design and development stage (what are these approaches)?arrow_forward
- kamihq.com/web/viewer.html?state%=D%7B"ids"%3A%5B"1vSrSXbH_6clkKyVVKKAtzZb_GOMRwrCG"%5D%... lasses Gmail Copy of mom it for.. Маps OGOld Telephone Ima. Preview attachmen... Kami Uploads ► Sylvanus Gator - Mechanical Advantage Practice Sheet.pdf rec Times New Roman 14px 1.5pt BIUSA A Xa x* 三三 To find the Mechanical Advantage of ANY simple machine when given the force, use MA = R/E. 1. An Effort force of 30N is appliled to a screwdriver to pry the lid off of a can of paint. The screwdriver applies 90N of force to the lid. What is the MA of the screwdriver? MA =arrow_forwardNeeds Complete typed solution with complete explanation and 100 % accuracy. Don't use chat gpt or any aiarrow_forwardQ1: You are designing a high-pressure oxygen cylinder for hospitals fighting against COVID. The material used is layered unidirectional continuous fiber reinforced composite, as schematically shown in Fig.1 (a). In the 0° layer, the fiber is along the Y direction, and the fiber is along X direction in the 90° layer. The thickness of the 90° layer is 1.5 times of that of the 0° layer. The matrix material is an isotropic material with the Young's modulus E-10 GPa and volume fraction Vm-20%, while the continuous fiber is an anisotropic material with the Young's modulus E₁-250 GPa along the length direction, E2-20 GPa along the transverse direction and volume fraction V₁-80% a) Based on rule of mixture and mechanics of material method, calculate the effective Young's modulus along each direction (Ex, Ey, E₂). b) The as-produced (unloaded) inner radius Ro-0.1 m, the wall thickness H=0.005 m (<arrow_forwardarrow_back_iosarrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of Heat Transfer (Activate Learning wi...Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781305387102Author:Kreith, Frank; Manglik, Raj M.Publisher:Cengage Learning

Principles of Heat Transfer (Activate Learning wi...
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781305387102
Author:Kreith, Frank; Manglik, Raj M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning