Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

A method for highlighting differences between bacteria grown on nutrient agar using near infrared spectroscopy and principal component analysis

Sylvain Treguier; Kevin Jacq; Christel Couderc; Hicham Ferhout; Helene Tormo; Didier Kleiber; Cecile Levasseur-Garcia

Journal of Near Infrared Spectroscopy · 2021

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Summary

Fast diagnostic tools such as near infrared spectroscopy have recently gained interest for bacterial identification. To avoid a process involving microbial pellet or suspension preparation from Petri dishes for NIR analysis, direct screening from agar in Petri dishes was explored. This two-step study proposes a new procedure for bacterial screening directly on agar plates with minimal nutrient medium bias. Firstly, principal component analyses showed optimal discrimination between the genera Lactobacillus, Pseudomonas and Brochothrix on different culture media, in transmission mode and with the bottom of Petri dishes facing the light source. The repeatability of spectra in these conditions was assessed with an average coefficient of variation inferior to 5% in the 12,500–3680 cm−1 range.

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1177/09670335211006532
Catalogue ID
NRmo9rin9c-0tm
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