snake venom against bacterial inhibition procedures

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Scotty59454
Posts: 3
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2012 12:25 pm
Occupation: Student
Project Question: We are testing the antimicrobial properties of snake venom against bacteria and blood cells. We are then going to use HPLC reverse fractionation and test certain fractions against the bacterias and blood to find our if it is still disruptive to the blood and if it isnt see if it is effective against the bacteria.
Project Due Date: February 24
Project Status: I am just starting

snake venom against bacterial inhibition procedures

Post by Scotty59454 »

Can a test solution of snake venom be applied directly to a bacteria coated agar plate for antimicrobial studies, or do you have to use a sterile disk coated in the solution and then applying to the bacteria plate.
mbadtke
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Joined: Mon Sep 12, 2011 8:33 am
Occupation: College Professor
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Re: snake venom against bacterial inhibition procedures

Post by mbadtke »

Scotty,
I would recommend using coated discs instead of just adding the venom to the plate. That will allow for the same amount to be added to your replicate plates and also will make the effectiveness easier to see (by measuring the zone of inhibition). Your project sounds very interesting, are you going to test the venom against pure cultures of specific species of bacteria?
Scotty59454
Posts: 3
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2012 12:25 pm
Occupation: Student
Project Question: We are testing the antimicrobial properties of snake venom against bacteria and blood cells. We are then going to use HPLC reverse fractionation and test certain fractions against the bacterias and blood to find our if it is still disruptive to the blood and if it isnt see if it is effective against the bacteria.
Project Due Date: February 24
Project Status: I am just starting

Re: snake venom against bacterial inhibition procedures

Post by Scotty59454 »

That is what we did last year and now as well this year thanks. Yes, we are testing it against three pure cultures of bacteria. We are also hoping to test the solutions and fractions against the red blood cells too.
Scotty59454
Posts: 3
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2012 12:25 pm
Occupation: Student
Project Question: We are testing the antimicrobial properties of snake venom against bacteria and blood cells. We are then going to use HPLC reverse fractionation and test certain fractions against the bacterias and blood to find our if it is still disruptive to the blood and if it isnt see if it is effective against the bacteria.
Project Due Date: February 24
Project Status: I am just starting

Re: snake venom against bacterial inhibition procedures

Post by Scotty59454 »

We are choosing to use sheep blood agar plates to test the hemolysis of the serial dilutions of the venom, do we have to incuabe the sheep blood agar plates if we arent trying to see bacterial growth?
aelin
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Joined: Sun Sep 27, 2009 6:50 pm
Occupation: Student: Junior in College
Project Question: Role of viral proteins in the HSV1 life cycle, specifically during entry and egress.
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Re: snake venom against bacterial inhibition procedures

Post by aelin »

Hi,

That might be helpful to incubate the plates. The bacteria and red blood cells typically grow best when incubated; even if you aren't measuring growth it would be nice to keep temperature consistent.
Hope this helps!
Aaron Lin
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