Abstract

The aim of broth and agar dilution methods is to determine the lowest concentration of the assayed antimicrobial agent (minimal inhibitory concentration, MIC) that, under defined test conditions, inhibits the visible growth of the bacterium being investigated. MIC values are used to determine susceptibilities of bacteria to drugs and also to evaluate the activity of new antimicrobial agents. Agar dilution involves the incorporation of different concentrations of the antimicrobial substance into a nutrient agar medium followed by the application of a standardized number of cells to the surface of the agar plate. For broth dilution, often determined in 96-well microtiter plate format, bacteria are inoculated into a liquid growth medium in the presence of different concentrations of an antimicrobial agent. Growth is assessed after incubation for a defined period of time (16-20 h) and the MIC value is read. This protocol applies only to aerobic bacteria and can be completed in 3 d.

Keywords

AntimicrobialMinimum inhibitory concentrationAgarAgar dilutionBacteriaDilutionBacterial growthAgar plateMicrobiologyMinimum bactericidal concentrationSerial dilutionChromatographyNutrient agarChemistryMicrotiter plateAgar Dilution MethodFood scienceBiologyMedicine

MeSH Terms

AgarAnti-Bacterial AgentsBacteriaAerobicCulture MediaDrug ResistanceBacterialMicrobial Sensitivity TestsTime Factors

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

BACTERICIDAL ACTION OF HISTONE

The arginine-rich fraction of calf thymus histone (histone B) exerts bactericidal activity on various coliform bacilli and micrococci under certain conditions in vitro. Final co...

1958 The Journal of Experimental Medicine 357 citations

Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
3
Issue
2
Pages
163-175
Citations
5705
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

5705
OpenAlex
181
Influential

Cite This

Irith Wiegand, Kai Hilpert, Robert E. W. Hancock (2008). Agar and broth dilution methods to determine the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of antimicrobial substances. Nature Protocols , 3 (2) , 163-175. https://doi.org/10.1038/nprot.2007.521

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/nprot.2007.521
PMID
18274517

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%