11-28-18 — High Titer Plaque Assay Second Attempt
Date: Wednesday, November 28th, 2018
Title: High Titer Plaque Assay Second Attempt
Rationale: The purpose of today’s lab is to calculate the titer of the lysate using a previous plaque assay and then to attempt to web a plate using the titer calculations.
Class Question: Is there a difference in bacteriophage presence or type in soil samples taken from live oaks vs those from red oaks?
Procedure:
- An aseptic zone was set up.
- Plates from last lab were evaluated and found to have negative results.
- A new 10^-7 dilution was made using the positive lysate.
- 20 μL of 10^-7 diluted lysate was added to a culture tube containing .5 mL arthrobacter and left to infect for 15 minutes.
- Top agar solution was made using the following recipe:
- 4 mL LB Broth
- 5 mL 2x top agar
- 45 μL 1M CaCl2
- 4.5 mL of TA solution was added to a top agar control plate.
- 4.5 mL of TA solution was added to the culture tube and pipetted to mix.
- The contents of the culture tube were poured into a plate.
- The plates were left to sit for 15 minutes before being inverted and placed in an incubator for the next 48 hours.
Observations: The plates from last lab yielded negative results. This is most likely due to the original 10^-7 dilution losing its infectivity. The newly made dilution should produce results, as it has a high titer.
Results: This experiment yielded a top agar control and a plaque assay that, according to titer calculations, should be a webbed plate.
Next Step: The next step is to evaluate the plates and flood it with phage buffer.