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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 1998, p. 4643-4649, Vol. 64, No. 12
Strathclyde Fermentation Centre, Department
of Bioscience and Biotechnology, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
G1 1XW, Scotland, United Kingdom
Received 7 July 1998/Accepted 22 September 1998
The growth and culturability of Campylobacter jejuni
NCTC 11351 and other campylobacters were examined in media having
different osmolalities at a range of temperatures (4, 25, and 42°C).
The medium osmolalities used ranged from the osmolality of
full-strength nutrient medium (modified campylobacter broth having an
osmolality of around 254 mosmol) down to 96 mosmol. The following two
methods were used to produce media having different osmolalities:
dilution of the nutrient medium with distilled water and reformulation of the medium such that the concentrations of various osmolytes were
altered while the nutrient content of the medium was unchanged. The
results obtained with the two experimental methods were similar, indicating that there was an osmotic threshold effect, such that none
of the campylobacters examined (C. jejuni NCTC 11351 and ATCC 33291, Campylobacter lari, and Campylobacter
coli) grew in media having osmolalities around 130 mosmol and at
temperatures below at 42°C. Conversely, growth occurred in media
having osmolalities of around 175 mosmol and above. Osmolar
concentrations can be expressed in terms of osmolarity or osmolality.
Osmolality is easier to evaluate, is the more commonly used term, and
was used in the current study. In nutrient media having low
osmolalities (i.e., 130 mosmol and below), the number of CFUs per
milliliter declined rapidly regardless of the temperature, and no cells
were recovered after 24 h. However, at nongrowth temperatures (25 and 4°C) in higher-osmolality media (175 mosmol and above) a
significant population was recovered throughout the experiment (up to
96 h). In low-osmolality nutrient media, the cellular morphology
was principally coccoid, while in the early stages of growth in
full-strength media the morphology was predominantly rodlike. We
propose that the formation of coccoid cells in these experiments was
the result of osmotic stress in low-osmolality media. This osmotic
effect was apparent regardless of the osmolyte used to reformulate the medium (NaCl, KCl, Na2SO4, NH4Cl,
and glucose were used).
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Effect of Low-Osmolality Nutrient Media on Growth
and Culturability of Campylobacter Species
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Strathclyde
Fermentation Centre, Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology,
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1XW, Scotland, United Kingdom.
Phone: 44 141 548 2055. Fax: 44 141 553 1161. E-mail:
b.mcneil{at}strath.ac.uk.
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