Integrated and high-throughput method to collect, store, recover, and manage microbial isolates in mini-arrays
Moon H. Nahm

TL;DR
A new method uses microplates with 50% glycerol to efficiently store and recover microbial isolates, enabling long-term management and large-scale studies.
Contribution
The novel use of 50% glycerol in frozen microplates allows selective recovery of isolates without thawing the entire collection.
Findings
Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates stored in microplate arrays remained viable for over 10 years.
The method reduces storage space by 6- to 23-fold compared to traditional methods.
The glycerol-based system enables direct high-throughput analysis of microbial collections.
Abstract
Clinical studies of vaccines generally require collections of microbial isolates obtained from various body sites over multiple years. Further, large microbe collections are needed for research due to increasing appreciation for the phenotypic and genotypic diversity among a single microbial species. However, large collections are not generally available due to method limitations. We show a new way to create, recover, and manage microbe collections in 96- or 384-well plates using 50% glycerol at −20°C. Fifty percent glycerol remains liquid at −20°C and permits only the chosen isolates to be reliably sampled without first thawing all other isolates in the plate. Consequently, the glycerol sampling allows integration of microbe collection, labeling, recovery, and storage steps. Creating a microbe collection as an array in microplates reduces physical storage space by 6- or 23-fold with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Bacterial Identification and Susceptibility Testing · Antibiotics Pharmacokinetics and Efficacy
