A six-well plate method: Less laborious and effective method for cultivation of obligate anaerobic microorganisms

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Abstract

We developed a simple, less laborious method to cultivate and isolate obligate anaerobic microorganisms using a six-well plate together with the AnaeroPack System, designated as the six-well plate method. The cultivation efficiency of this method, based on colony-forming units, colony formation time, and colony size, was evaluated with four authentic obligate anaerobes (two methanogenic archaea and two sulfate-reducing bacteria). The method was found to be comparable to or even better than the roll tube method, a technique that is commonly used at present for the cultivation of obligate anaerobes. Further experiments using 21 representative obligate anaerobes demonstrated that all examined anaerobes (11 methanogens, 5 sulfate- or thiosulfate-reducing bacteria, and 5 syntrophs) could form visible colonies on the six-well plate and that these colonies could be successfully subcultured in fresh liquid media. Using this method, an unidentified sulfate-reducing bacterium was successfully isolated from an environmental sample.

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Nakamura, K., Tamaki, H., Kang, M. S., Mochimaru, H., Lee, S. T., Nakamura, K., & Kamagata, Y. (2011). A six-well plate method: Less laborious and effective method for cultivation of obligate anaerobic microorganisms. Microbes and Environments, 26(4), 301–306. https://doi.org/10.1264/jsme2.ME11120

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