Improved Neisseria gonorrhoeae culture media without atmospheric CO2
Chukwuma Jude Menkiti, Lori A. S. Snyder

TL;DR
Researchers developed improved culture media for Neisseria gonorrhoeae that eliminates the need for CO2, making bacterial culture easier and more accessible.
Contribution
The development of CO2-independent culture media for Neisseria gonorrhoeae using sodium bicarbonate.
Findings
Adding 0.75 g/l sodium bicarbonate to Oxoid GC agar base improved growth without CO2.
CO2-independent versions of Chocolate and Thayer-Martin agars also supported good N. gonorrhoeae growth.
The new media performed as well as standard media in CO2 incubators.
Abstract
Bacterial culture on solid media is the crucial step in diagnosing Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections and is the gold standard for determining their antimicrobial resistance profile. However, culture of Neisseria spp. can be challenging in resource poor areas, relying on specialist incubators or other methods of supplying 5% CO2 for growth of the bacteria. Even when such incubators are available, the CO2 to run them may be scarce; there were CO2 shortages during the COVID-19 pandemic, for example. Although culture jars with gas packs or candles can be used, these are inefficient in terms of use of incubator space and researcher time. To achieve simplicity in culturing of N. gonorrhoeae, the standard Oxoid GC agar base medium, made with the Kellogg’s glucose and iron supplements was improved with the addition of 0.75 g/l sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3), which is inexpensive and readily…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacterial Infections and Vaccines · Reproductive tract infections research · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
