Plaque Assay for Phage Discovery
Date: August 29, 2018
Title: Plaque Assay for Phage Isolation
Rationale: Regardless of spot test result, a plaque assay is done to obtain another measure of phage presence.
Materials: Arthrobacter, LB Broth, 2X Top Agar, 1M CaCl2, Enriched lysate, pipet, micropipette, plate, vials
Procedure: To create an aseptic zone, the following was done:
- Counter washed and wiped with CiDecon
- Counter sprayed with 70% EtOH and allowed to evaporate completely (to dehydrate and kill any bacteria on the counter and avoid contamination)
- Ethanol lamp lit to create rising heat and a current that protests samples from falling contamina
- mL Arthrobacter and 10 microliters of filtered enriched lysate (filtered at spot test)
In 50 mL tube the following was added (for 3 plaque assays and 1 group control):
- 8 mL LB
- 10 mL 2X Top Agar
- 90 microliters CaCl2
~18 mL of solution
- Once the solution was finished, 4.5 mL was added to the small vial of Arthrobacter + lysate (enriched, filtered) and poured onto the plate. (NOTE: One vial was broken in the transition to the plate. The counter was re-sanitized, and another vial was prepared)
Results/Observations: The plate and the solution were yellowish and was put into the incubator to grow over the weekend. If the result is positive, I would expect to see growth on the plaque assay, and a negative result on the control. A negative result would constitute contamination on the control, or no growth on the plaque assay. Assuming a positive result, the next step would be to begin isolating the discovered phage. (See attached picture of resulting plaque assay plate before incubation)