culturable
(adjective)
 Able to be cultured (grown in a suitable environment).
Examples of culturable in the following topics:
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Pure Culture
- It is often essential to isolate a pure culture of microorganisms.
 - Another method of bacterial culture is liquid culture, in which the desired bacteria are suspended in liquid broth, a nutrient medium.
 - As an alternative, the microbiologist may decide to use static liquid cultures.
 - Geomyces destructans in culture from bat tissues.
 - Describe how pure microbial cultures can be grown in agar-based growth medium
 
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Tissue Culture of Animal Viruses
- In practice, the term "cell culture" now refers to the culturing of cells derived from multi-cellular eukaryotes, especially animal cells.
 - The historical development and methods of cell culture are closely interrelated to those of tissue culture and organ culture.
 - Cultured cells, eggs, and laboratory animals may be used for virus isolation.
 - Cell cultures vary greatly in their susceptibility to different viruses.
 - Discover the use of, and reasons for, culturing animal viruses in host cells
 
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Batch Culture of Bacteriophages
- Bacteriophage cultures require host cells in which the virus or phage multiply.
 - Virus or phage cultures require host cells in which to multiply.
 - For bacteriophages, cultures are grown by infecting bacterial cells .
 - Virus or phage cultures require host cells in which to multiply.
 - For bacteriophages, cultures are grown by infecting bacterial cells.
 
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Preserving Bacterial Cultures
- Take the overnight culture and and mix an aliquot with 40% glycerol in sterile water and place in a cryogenic vial.
 - While it is possible to make a long term stock from cells in the stationary phase, ideally your culture should be in logarithmic growth phase.
 - To do this, spin the culture down and resuspend it in the same volume of straight LB medium.
 - An erlenmeyer containing a bacterial culture.
 - Describe how bacterial cultures can be stored for a long time at -80C in glycerol
 
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Koch and Pure Culture
- He invented methods to purify the bacillus from blood samples and grow pure cultures.
 - Additionally, it must be absent in healthy organisms prepared and maintained in a pure culture capable of producing the original infection, even after several generations in culture retrievable from an inoculated animal and cultured again.
 - Pure cultures of multicellular organisms are often more easily isolated by simply picking out a single individual to initiate a culture.
 - This is a useful technique for pure culture of fungi, multicellular algae, and small metazoa.
 - Developing pure culture techniques is crucial to the observation of the specimen in question.
 
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Special Culture Techniques
- Animals can often be used to culture microbes.
 - Using animals to culture human-pathogens has problems.
 - Some human pathogens are grown directly on cells cultured from humans.
 - The human cell culture known as McCoy cell culture is used to culture this bacteria .
 - A candle is lit in a jar with a culture plate.
 
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Cultivation of Specimen
- It is also critical that the pathogen is isolated in a pure culture first.
 - A patient's blood is usually cultured in a special bottle of broth that can be periodically sampled for growth.
 - Work must be done from isolated colonies or pure cultures, as working with mixed or contaminated cultures gives misleading and inaccurate results.
 - From such isolates, clinical microbiologists obtain information about a pathogen's microscopic morphology and staining reactions, culture appearance, motility, oxygen requirements, and biochemical characteristics.
 - This blood is cultured in a bottle to detect bloodstream infections.
 
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Limitation of Microbial Growth by Nutrient Supply
- Nutrients are necessary for microbial growth and play a vital role in culturing microorganisms outside of their natural environment.
 - Hence, it is critical to identify the required nutrients and ensure these are supplied in the culturing of microorganisms.
 - An image of an anthrax culture grown on a petri dish.
 - In order for microogranisms to be cultured in the laboratory or undergo successful growth in their natural environment, the proper nutrients are absolutely necessary.
 - Describe the role of nutrients in microbial growth and their culture in the lab
 
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Diagnosing Microbial Diseases
- The first tool in diagnosing microbial disease is microbial cultures.
 - It is critical to isolate the infectious agent in a pure culture containing only the infectious bacteria.
 - The use of microbial cultures is common to help in the clinical identification of pathogenic microbes.
 - However, there are specific classes of microbe that require culture within live animals.
 - The bacteria Mycobacterium leprae is such a microbe, as it can only be cultured in animals.
 
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Measurements of Microbial Mass
- Cell cultures are turbid: they absorb some of the light and let the rest of it pass through.
 - The culture is placed in a translucent cuvette; the cuvette is placed in the machine and the turbidity measured immediately.
 - Using spectrophotometry for measuring the turbidity of cultures is known as turbidometry.
 - Additionally, there are spectrophotometers that require extremely small volumes of culture, as little as 1 microliter .
 - This, combined with the stochastic nature of liquid cultures, enables only an estimation of cell numbers.