Resistance of Bacillus subtilis spores to inactivation by gamma irradiation and heating in the presence of a bactericide. I. Suitability of viable count procedures.

1970 
Abstract A statistical evaluation of viable count procedures utilized for obtaining treatment survival curve data for Bacillus subtilis NCTC 8236 spores is described. Within the various recovery conditions tested, incubation on nutrient agar containing 1% dextrose for 48 hr at 37 C was found to promote the highest count of viable spores surviving a variety of bactericidal treatments involving gamma irradiation, heat, and chlorocresol. The count of viable spores on the medium was not significantly altered when the dextrose was added to the nutrient agar either before autoclaving or aseptically at 50 to 55 C from a solution sterilized by filtration. The volume of medium which promoted the highest count of viable spores was 20 ml per 85 mm of diameter in disposable plastic plates. Counts of viable spores were reproducible on successive batches of media. The carry-over of variable concentrations of chlorocresol into the medium from serial dilutions affected the count of viable spores. Spores in the aqueous stock suspension used for all experiments were uniformly distributed after shaking and did not diminish significantly in viability after 16 months of storage at 5 C. Grouping of indexes of dispersion, calculated from quintuplicate plate colony counts, indicated that the suitability of the viable count procedures, employed for the enumeration of spores surviving the various bactericidal treatments, tended to diminish as the level of spore inactivation exceeded 95%.
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