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A student inoculates a gelatin tube and places it at 37C for the week. When he comes back he takes the tube out of the incubator and notices that the media is liquid. He concludes that the bacterium is gelatinase positive. Is this the right conclusion? Explain.

User Wingware
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Gelatin

Step-by-step explanation:

Gelatin is a differential medium which tests the ability of an organism to produce an exoenzyme, called gelatinase (this enzyme hydrolyzes gelatin)

When gelatin is at a temperature below 32°C (or within a few degrees thereof), it is a semisolid material and at temperatures above 32°C, it is a viscous liquid

When gelatin is broken down, it can no longer solidify and if an organism can break down gelatin, the areas where the organism has grown will remain liquid even if the gelatin is refrigerated

No the conclusion by student is not right because the tube must be runny after incubation followed by refrigeration to be considered gelatinase positive

User AlexGera
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