Presented here is an analytical method to detect residual agar from a bacterial spore sample as an indication of culturing on an agar plate. This method is based on the resolubilization of agar polysaccharide from a bacterial spore sample, enzymatic digestion, followed by electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MSn) analysis for detection of a specific agar fragment ion. A range of Bacillus species and strains were selected to demonstrate the effectiveness of this approach. The characteristic agar fragment ion was detected in the spores grown on agar that were washed from 1 to 5 times, irradiated or non-irradiated and not in the spores grown in broth. A sample containing approximately 108 spores is currently needed for confident detection of residual agar from culture on agar plates in the presence of bacterial spores with a limit of detection of approximately 1 ppm agar spiked into a broth-grown spore sample. The results of a proficiency test with 42 blinded samples are presented demonstrating the utility of this method with no false positives and only 3 false negatives for samples that were below the detection level of the method as documented.
Revised: July 27, 2010 |
Published: February 15, 2010
Citation
Wahl K.L., H.A. Colburn, D.S. Wunschel, C.E. Petersen, K.H. Jarman, and N.B. Valentine. 2010.Residual Agar Determination in Bacterial Spores by Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry.Analytical Chemistry 82, no. 4:1200-1206.PNNL-SA-67197.