1. A method for the selective isolation of Myxococcus directly from soil.
- Author
-
Karwowski JP, Sunga GN, Kadam S, and McAlpine JB
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents, Culture Media chemistry, Fidaxomicin, Hot Temperature, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Ultrasonography, Aminoglycosides, Bacteriological Techniques, Myxococcus isolation & purification, Soil Microbiology
- Abstract
A new method is described for the selective isolation of species of Myxococcus directly from soil by dilution plating. The method involves suppression of competing microorganisms with antibiotics combined with air drying and wet heat treatment of soils. Fungi were eliminated by supplementing the plating medium with cycloheximide and nystatin. Non-sporulating bacteria were controlled by air drying soils and then heating aqueous soil dilutions for 10 min at 56 degrees C. The predominant sporulating bacteria in soil, Streptomyces and Bacillus, were suppressed by adding either tiacumicin B, ristocetin or vancomycin to the medium. Swarming of Myxococcus colonies was controlled with a casein digest-yeast extract plating medium (CY-C10 agar). Ultrasound treatment of soil suspensions gave the highest number of Myxococcus colonies in the soils studied, but these cultures could be recovered without ultrasound. Strains of Myxococcus fulvus, M. xanthus, M. coralloides, M. stipitatus and M. virescens were isolated from soil using this technique. Soils examined yielded one or two Myxococcus species per sample.
- Published
- 1996
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