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  2. Simmons' citrate agar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simmons'_citrate_agar

    It is a defined, selective and differential medium that tests for an organism's ability to use citrate as a sole carbon source and ammonium ions as the sole nitrogen source. After citrate enters a cell through citrate permeases, citrate lyase cleaves it into acetate and oxaloacetate, which is further broken down into carbon dioxide and pyruvate ...

  3. Citrate test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citrate_Test

    Use of citrate involves the enzyme citrate lyase, which breaks down citrate to oxaloacetate and acetate. Oxaloacetate is further broken down to pyruvate and carbon dioxide (CO 2). Production of sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO 3) as well as ammonia (NH 3) from the use of sodium citrate and ammonium salts results in alkaline pH. This results in a ...

  4. IMViC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMViC

    The agar contains citrate and ammonium ions (nitrogen source) and bromothymol blue (BTB) as a pH indicator. [2] Bromothymol blue was added in order to reduce false positives. The citrate agar is green before inoculation, and turns blue, because of BTB as a positive test indicator, meaning citrate is utilized.

  5. Citrobacter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citrobacter

    The species C. amalonaticus, C. koseri, and C. freundii can use citrate as a sole carbon source. Citrobacter species are differentiated by their ability to convert tryptophan to indole (C. koseri is the only citrobacter to be commonly indole-positive), ferment lactose (C. koseri is a lactose fermentor), and use malonate.

  6. Klebsiella aerogenes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klebsiella_aerogenes

    Klebsiella aerogenes, [2] previously known as Enterobacter aerogenes, is a Gram-negative, oxidase-negative, catalase-positive, citrate-positive, indole-negative, rod-shaped bacterium. [3] Capable of motility via peritrichous flagella, [4] it is approximately one to three microns in length.

  7. DCA agar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCA_agar

    DCA agar (deoxycholate citrate agar) is a solid bacteriological growth medium used for isolation of enteric pathogens. [1] Uses

  8. Proteus vulgaris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proteus_vulgaris

    Positive for the phenylalanine test and the Harnstoff urea test P. vulgaris can test positive or negative for citrate. All combine for a Biocode ID of 31406, (Biocode ID 31402, 31404, 31407 all resulting in P. vulgaris with asymptomatic results) for use in the Interpretation Guide/Computer Coding and Identification System.

  9. Staining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staining

    Simple Staining is a technique that only uses one type of stain on a slide at a time. Because only one stain is being used, the specimens (for positive stains) or background (for negative stains) will be one color. Therefore, simple stains are typically used for viewing only one organism per slide. Differential staining uses multiple stains per ...