Aim
To determine the thermal
death time and thermal death point of the given test organism
Principle
Temperature
is one of the most important physical factors influencing the growth of
microorganisms. Bacteria unlike eukaryotes lack homeostatic mechanism and they
do not regulate the heat generated by metabolism thus are affected readily by
changes in temperature. Enzymatic reactions have maximum efficiency at optimum
temperature which varies with organisms. For every 100C rise in
temperature, there is 2 fold increase in the rate of enzyme catalyzed reactions
for a limited range of temperature. At high temperatures, proteins are
irreversibly denatured and there is a total enzyme destruction. At low
temperature, the enzyme reactions are merely inactivated and are thus less
harmful.
Bacteria
are divided into three major groups with respect to their temperature
requirements:
1)
Psychrophiles with optimum temperature
between 0 and 200C
2)
Mesophiles with optimum temperature
between 20 and 400C
3)
Thermophiles with optimum temperature
between 40 and 600C
Normally, the lethal range of temperature for bacteria is between 50 and 1000C. Time of exposure is a vital factor in assessing the lethal effect of high temperature on bacterial cells. Determination of thermal death time (TDT) and thermal death point (TDP) are done for this purpose.
1) Thermal death point (TDP) – Temperature at which an organism is killed in 10 minutes of exposure. Lethal action of heat has a temperature-time relationship. Thermal death point is done to determine the degree of heat tolerance of the organism. Some factors such as pH, moisture, composition of media and age of cells influence TDP.
Materials
required
Cultures
of S. aureus, E. coli, nutrient tubes, nutrient agar plates, water bath,
incubator etc
Methodology
1) Thermal death point (TDP)
Into each of the sterile test tubes, 5 ml of
sterile nutrient broth was dispensed and tubes were marked 40, 50, 60, 70, 80,
90 and 100 0C for different organisms. A loopful of culture was
inoculated into the respective tubes and incubated for ten minutes at each
temperature. They were then plated on nutrient agar plates and incubated at 370C
for 24 hours. The temperature above which the organism was completely killed
and did not grow was noted and this was determined as the thermal death point
of the organism.
2) Thermal death time (TDT)
Each
sterile tube containing 5 ml nutrient broth was inoculated with loopful of
cultures and incubated at their thermal death point (TDP). A loopful of
cultures from the tubes were taken at regular intervals of 3 minutes each,
starting from 0 minutes till 15 minutes and plated on to nutrient agar followed
by incubation at 370C for 24
hours. The time period above which the organisms were completely killed and did
not grow was determined as thermal death time (TDT).
Result
The thermal death point
(TDP) and thermal death time (TDT) for S.
aureus was ---------
and for E. coli was ----------.
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