Tandem Coagulase/Thermonuclease Agar Method for the Detection of Staphylococcus aureus

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In optimizing previously reported coagulase agar media to obtain a rapid, reliable, and inexpensive coagulase test agar, variations in plasmas, pH, buffer system, fibrinogen, and fibrinolytic inhibitor were investigated. The agar with the following composition was determined best for the demonstration of coagulase production by Staphylococcus aureus: 25 ml of 15% bovine fibrinogen (fraction I, type I, citrated, Sigma Chemical Co.), 25 ml of rehydrated rabbit plasma (coagulase plasma ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, Difco), 10.0 mg of soybean trypsin inhibitor (Schwarz/Mann), and 450 ml of brain heart infusion agar (Difco). In additional studies involving 7 different temperatures and 11 heating times, the thermal destruction of microbial nucleases on plate count agar and coagulase test agar was investigated. Heating the plates for 2.5 h at 65°C destroyed all heatlabile nucleases, but not thermonucleases of S. aureus. A tandem agar plate method for the identification of S. aureus was developed. Coagulase and thermonuclease activity of 50 colonies can be detected on a single agar plate. Suspect S. aureus colonies isolated on various selective media are transferred to coagulase test agar, the plates are incubated at 37°C for 18 h, and the coagulase reaction is recorded. The plates are then heated at 65°C for 2.5 h, overlaid with toluidine blue-metachromatic diffusion agar, and reincubated at 37°C for 3 h, and the thermonuclease reaction is recorded. Studies based on 88 enterotoxigenic S. aureus strains and 133 and 48 suspect S. aureus strains isolated from fresh salami mixtures on mannitol salt and tellurite-polymyxin-egg yolk agars, respectively, demonstrated 100% agreement between the tandem agar plate method and standard coagulase and thermonuclease tests. Overall, the tandem agar plate method is a rapid and convenient approach contributing to the identification of S. aureus from foods.

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