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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Jul 1995, 2521-2526, Vol 61, No. 7
R Lopez-Amoros, J Comas and J Vives-Rego
The use of flow cytometry in microbiology allows rapid characterization of
cells from a nonhomogeneous population. A method based on flow cytometry to
assess the effects of lethal agents and the bacterial survival in starved
cultures through the use of membrane potential- sensitive dyes and a
nucleic acid marker is presented. The use of propidium iodide, rhodamine,
and oxonol has facilitated the differentiation of cells of Escherichia coli
and Salmonella typhimurium of various states of vitality following various
treatments (heat, sonication, electroporation, and incubation with
gramicidin) and during starvation in artificial seawater. The fluorescence
intensity is directly correlated with viable cell counts for rhodamine 123
labelling, whereas oxonol and propidium iodide labelling is inversely
correlated with viable counts. The distribution of rhodamine and oxonol
uptake during starvation-survival clearly indicates that single-species
starved bacteria are heterogeneous populations, and flow cytometry can be a
fundamental tool for quantifying this heterogeneity.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Flow cytometric assessment of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium starvation-survival in seawater using rhodamine 123, propidium iodide, and oxonol
Departament de Microbiologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain.
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