Oxidase test: Difference between revisions
(Imported from text file) |
m (Aidan moved page Oxidase to Oxidase test) |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 12:17, 16 August 2019
Oxidase test
The oxidase test is used to identify bacteria that produce cytochrome c oxidase, an enzyme of the bacterial electron transport chain. When present, the cytochrome c oxidase oxidizes the reagent (tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine) to (indophenols) purple color end product. When the enzyme is not present, the reagent remains reduced and is colorless.
Note: All bacteria that are oxidase positive are aerobic, and can use oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor in respiration. This does NOT mean that they are strict aerobes. Bacteria that are oxidase-negative may be anaerobic, aerobic, or facultative; the oxidase negative result just means that these organisms do not have the cytochrome c oxidase that oxidizes the test reagent. They may respire using other oxidases in electron transport.
Test requirements for Oxidase test: Moist filter paper with the substrate (1% tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride), or commercially prepared paper disk, wooden wire or platinum wire.
Procedure
- Take a filter paper soaked with the substrate tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride
- Moisten the paper with a sterile distilled water
- Pick the colony to be tested with wooden or platinum loop and smear in the filter paper
- Observe inoculated area of paper for a color change to deep blue or purple within 10-30 seconds
Precautions
- Do not use Nickel-base alloy wires containing chromium and iron (nichrome) to pick the colony and make smear as this may give false positive results
- Interpret the results within 10 seconds, timing is critical
- The oxidase test must be performed from 5% Sheep blood agar or another medium without a fermentable sugar . Fermentation of a carbohydrate results in acidification of the medium (e.g., lactose in MacConkey Agar or Sucrose in TCBS), and a false negative oxidase test may result if the surrounding pH is below 5.1.
- During identification of suspected Vibrio cholerae isolate, it is not possible to perform an oxidase test directly from a TCBS culture because the acid produced by the sucrose fermenting colonies will inhibit the oxidase reaction.
Interpretation
- Positive: Development of dark purple color (indophenols) within 10 seconds
- Negative: Absence of color
Bacterial genera characterized as oxidase positive include Neisseria and Pseudomonas. Genera of theEnterobacteriaceae family are characterized as oxidase negative.
Name of Oxidase positive bacteria are: PVNCH
- P: Pseudomonas spp.
- V: Vibrio cholerae
- N: Neisseria spp.
- C: Campylobacter spp.
- H: Helicobacter spp. / Haemophilus spp.
- Aeromonas spp.
- Alcaligens