Title: Enteric Gram negative Rods
1Enteric Gram negative Rods
2Introduction
- The family Enterobacteriaceae (enterics) contains
Gram (-) facultative rods that are common
intestinal (colon) microbes, most of which are
either commensal or even mutualistic in the
colon. - These are the most frequently isolated bacteria
in the clinical lab coming from fecal samples
infections of fecal origin. They also colonize
mucous membranes outside the gut, especially in
hospitalized patients - In extraintestinal sites they are frequently
associated with UTI, lower respiratory tract and
wound infections. In fact, there is hardly an
anatomic site they do not infect in some cases. - A few genera are not normal colon microbes - they
are primary intestinal pathogens (a.k.a.
enteropathogenic) - The enteropathogenic enterics cause GI conditions
such as diarrhea, enteritis, dysentery, and
enteric fevers (e.g. typhoid and paratyphoid)
3Introduction
- Most genera are easily grown, and most look very
similar making presumptive ID based upon
morphology relatively difficult - cellular small, short Gram (-) rods in singles
and pairs - colonial off-white, translucent, slightly convex
colonies - Proteus and Klebsiella are exceptions. Proteus
(waves on the ocean) swarms on an agar
surface, and Klebsiella forms very mucoid
colonies. - Another exception is Yersinia entercolitica
because it grows better at room temp than at body
temp. Y. entercolitica colonies are 1 mm or less
in diameter after 24h incubation on blood or
MacConkey agar at 35oC whereas typical enterics
produce colonies 2-4 mm in diameter in these
growth conditions
4Preliminary grouping
- Oxidase negative
- Bile resistant
- Many carbohydrates fermented growth, acid, gas
- Ferment glucose some to acid (MR)
- some neutral (VP)
- Some ferment lactose coliforms (E. coli)
- Reduce nitrates to nitrites
- Catalase positive - facultative
- Motile, some by polar monotrichous flagella and
some by peritrichous flagella. Few are
non-motile all Shigella, some Klebsiella and
some Salmonella(?)
5Preliminary grouping
- The most frequently isolated enterics have been
categorized into subgroups or tribes that share
similar characteristics. These groupings are not
scientifically legitimate, and are almost
exclusively used for the enterics. Below NOT on
test. - Escherichieae Escherichia and Shigella
- Edwardsielleae Edwardsiella
- Salmonelleae Salmonella, Citrobacter
- Klebsielleae Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Serratia,
and Hafnia - Proteeae Proteus, Providencia, Morganella
- Yersinieae Yersinia
6Cultural characteristics
- As mentioned previously, enterics are
non-fastidious and bile-resistant, but fairly
antibiotic sensitive typically inhibited on
media with colistin, nalidixic acid, polymyxin or
cefaperazone - Most enteric selective media contain bile salts
and/or dyes with bile-like properties
(surfactants) that inhibit non-enteric bacteria - MacConkey agar is the most commonly used medium
of this type. It contains bile salts and crystal
violet. Eosin-Methylene Blue (EMB) is an
alternative to MacConkey. EMB contains eosin and
methylene blue. SS agar (Salmonella Shigella)
is similar to MacConkey but also indicates sulfur
reduction. - All of these media contain lactose and a pH
indicator to differentiate lactose fermenters
(yes or no and how much). Fecal coliforms such
as E. coli produce acid from lactose fermentation
resulting in darkened colonies on these media.
7Cultural characteristics
- Even though the name SS makes this medium sound
ideal, several literature reports state that some
strains of Shigella fail to grow on it - XLD and Hektoen are selective enteric agars used
for primary plating and subculture of enrichment
broths, and studies have shown that XLD and
Hektoen are less likely to inhibit enteric
species (produce higher yields than SS). - Like SS, XLD and HE are also based on lactose
fermentation and indicate sulfur reduction.
Hydrogen sulfide production results in black
colonies and on some media the agar becomes black
as well. - The H2S test component of these media is
particularly helpful because Salmonella, Proteus,
Edwardsiella, and an occasional Citrobacter
produce hydrogen sulfide whereas most normal gut
microbiota do not. Salmonella Edwardsiella are
significant in this list as enteric pathogens - All Shigella species are H2S-negative
8Cultural characteristics
- Enrichment media have been used for enterics in
the past. Using selenite broth allows
Salmonella (resistant), which is often a distinct
minority in the gut of carriers, to quickly
outgrow the other normal gut microbiota. - After an incubation time of 6 to 12 hours,
selenite broth is subcultured to a selective
agar, greatly enhancing the likelihood of
isolating Salmonella in carriers - Selenite broth may not be needed in acutely ill
patients because Salmonella will likely be the
predominate gut bacterium - Another enrichment broth medium, GN is claimed by
the manufacturer to enrich for both Salmonella
and Shigella. To be effective GN must be
subcultured after only 4 to 6 hours of
incubation. Why?
9Cultural characteristics
- Toxigenic E. coli strains have the same cultural
characteristics as commensal strains of E. coli
making the former difficult to detect - One exception is verotoxin (shiga) producing E.
coli (VTEC), a.k.a enterohemorrhagic (EHEC) E.
coli O157H7 - The majority of these strains do not ferment the
carbohydrate sorbitol whereas the normal strains
usually do - Sorbitol MacConkey (SMAC) contains the same
ingredients as regular MacConkey except that
sorbitol replaces lactose - Commensal E. coli produce the same dark colonies
on SMAC as on regular MacConkey but EHEC colonies
are colorless - Colonies suggestive of these strains are usually
further tested for the toxin with commercially
available ELISA tests
10Identification
- Gram (-) rods that behave like enterics on Mac,
EMB, etc should be screened with the oxidase
test. All enterics are oxidase (-) - Few non-enterics resemble the enterics and are
oxidase (-), and these are easily distinguished
with further testing - Cultures with typical enteric morphology on Mac,
are oxidase (-), and are indole () presumptively
ID as E. coli with a high probability. The last
2 tests must be run on cells from a medium devoid
of pH indicators SBA colonies normally used. - Proteus has the distinctive swarming
morphology. Over 95 of Proteus isolates from
clinical specimens is Proteus mirabilis, which is
the only frequently isolated Proteus that is
indole (-) making this an easy organism to ID. - P. penneri is also indole (-), however it is
extremely rare in clinical specimens and can be
differentiated from P. mirabilis based upon
different antimicrobial sensitivity patterns - The occasionally isolated P. vulgaris is indole
().
11Identification
- Before the advent of semi-automated and automated
ID systems certain enterics were presumptively
identified by the small battery of biochemical
tests indole, methyl red, Voges Proskauer, and
Citrate, the so-called IMViC series - Some labs still use IMViC, so questions about it
may still appear on certification examinations.
Below NOT on test, unless - Escherichia coli IMViC - -, lac
- Shigella IMViC - - - or - -, lac-,
non-motile - Klebsiella/Enterobacter IMViC - - , lac
(Klebsiella nonmotile) - Serratia IMViC - - , DNAse , lac variable
- Salmonella IMViC - - , lac-, H2S, lysine
decarboxyase - Citrobacter IMViC- - or - , lac
(mostly), H2S, lysine decarboxyase -
12Identification
- Oxidase (-) Gram (-) rods isolated from normally
sterile sites such as blood and spinal fluid
should be completely identified - Isolates that appear to be enterics and are
oxidase (-) should be tested for glucose
fermentation all enterics ferment glucose. - Kliglers iron agar (KIA), Triple Sugar Iron (TSI)
agar, O/F glucose, glucose fermentation broth and
other media can be used for this purpose. All
are based upon a pH indicator color change via
acid from glucose. - KIA and TSA, the most commonly used media for
this purpose in clinical labs, are deep slants
containing phenol red as a pH indicator. To
inoculate you stab the butt and streak the
slant. - The development of a yellow (acid) butt with a
red (alkaline) slant after 12-24h of 35oC
incubation indicates that the organism ferments
glucose only (K/A is shorthand is for alkaline
slant, acid butt)
13Test for Fermentation of Glucose
Kliglers or Triple Sugar Iron (K/A)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Acid butt, alkaline slant (K/A) indicates
fermentation of glucose only
14Test for Fermentation of Glucose
Kliglers or Triple Sugar Iron (A/A)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Acid throughout indicates fermentation of glucose
and lactose
15Test for Fermentation of Glucose
Kliglers or Triple Sugar Iron (K/K or NC)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
No acid indicates non-fermenter Rules out enteric
16Identification
- Hugh and Leifsons (HL) oxidation/fermentation
(O/F) medium contains a pH indicator (Bromthymol
blue - BTB), peptone and a carbohydrate of your
choice. BTB is green when neutral, blue when
alkaline, and yellow when acid - Two tubes of HL glucose media are stabbed to the
butt with a needle and 1 of the tubes is overlaid
with sterile mineral oil to prevent O2 diffusion
this is the F tube. - An O reaction is indicated by a yellow O tube
and no change in the F tube (yellow in the O tube
occurs due to CO2 from respiration reacting with
water to make carbonic acid). An F reaction is
indicated by yellow in both tubes these
organisms are glucose fermentors, such as
enterics - Blue in either tube is an indication of amine
accumulation from peptone utilization, useful
data for some Gram (-) non-fermenting (GNNF)
organisms HL is better for GNNFs than KIA or
TSI
17Test for Utilization of Glucose
Fermentation in Hugh and Leifsons test
Stab inoculate with a needle
Incubate 35oC 12-24h
Acid below the oil indicates glucose fermentation
No oil
Oil
18Test for Utilization of Glucose
Oxidation in Hugh and Leifsons test
Stab inoculate with a needle
Incubate 35oC 12-24h
Acid in top of open tube only indicates
oxidation of glucose This rules out enterics
No oil
Oil
19Test for Utilization of Glucose
Nonfermenter , Non-oxidizer (Inert)
Stab inoculate with a needle
Incubate 35oC 12-24h
No oil
No acid in either tubenonfermenter/nonoxidizer
This rules out enterics
Oil
20Screening for Enteric Pathogens
- Enteric isolates from stool specimens can be
screened with certain media/tests to eliminate
some possibilities. This makes the final ID
easier, but the down side is that it takes time. - Salmonella, Shigella, and Edwardsiella are
enteric pathogens that produce clear and
colorless colonies on enteric agars. - The Proteus group (Proteus, Providencia, and
Morganella), and a few others, are not enteric
pathogens. However, these may ( with exceptions)
also produce colorless colonies on enteric agars - All colorless colonies growing on enteric agars
could be subjected to a complete battery of tests
but this would not be practical since over 90 of
non-lactose fermenters isolated from feces are
not the 3 enteric pathogens mentioned above. - The use of a few tests is effective for ruling
out Salmonella Shigella before using an
expensive automated or semi-automated product /
approach.
21Screening for Enteric Pathogens
- KIA (or TSI), Lysine Iron Agar (LIA) and
Christensens Urea agar are media used for
screening enteric pathogens. - The fermentation/pH and the H2S reactions for the
enteric bacteria as a group were discussed in
previous slides in this series. - Remember that Salmonella, Shigella and
Edwardsiella produce alkaline slants and acid
butts in KIA or TSI, and that Salmonella
Edwardsiella are sulfur positive but Shigella is
sulfur (-) - Proteus species and Citrobacter fruendii are
usually also H2S positive but they are not
enteric pathogens - Organisms that give any other reaction pattern on
these media are not enteric pathogens - See KIA or TSI reaction patterns on following
slides
22Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Kliglers Reactions (K/A)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Shigella cannot rule out
23Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Kliglers Reactions (K/A)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Salmonella Edwardsiella cannot be ruled out
24Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Kliglers Reactions (A/A)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with cap loose
Not an enteric pathogen (typical of E.coli,
Klebsiella , or Enterobacter)
25Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Kliglers Reactions (A/A)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with cap loose
Not an enteric pathogen (typical of most
Citrobacter species)
26Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Kliglers Reactions (K/NC)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
No acid in butt rules out all enterics including
enteric pathogens, typical of Pseudomonas and
Acinetobacter
27Screening for Enteric Pathogens
- LIA is also a deep slant, and is inoculated as is
KIA TSI - LIA contains sulfur iron, the amino acid
lysine, a small amount of glucose, and the pH
indicator Bromcresol Purple (BCP) which is purple
if alkaline and yellow if acidic - The by-product of lysine deamination (occurs near
the top - aerobic) reacts with the iron causing a
color change from purple to red. - Only the Proteus group (Proteus species,
Morganella morganii, and Providencia species)
cause this reaction. This is important because
the Proteus group mimics enteric pathogens - Lysine decarboxylation (occurs where O2 is
low) forms alkaline amines. Enteric bacteria
growing in the butt will ferment the glucose, but
lysine decarboxylation neutralizes the acid from
fermentation and turns the butt purple.
Presencf of growth distinguishes this from NC.
Salmonella is lysine decarbox (). - A yellow butt reaction is typical of Shigella
species - Keep in mind that Proteus, Salmonella and
Citrobacter produce the black color via sulfur
reduction as well as the above results
28Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Lysine Iron Agar (K/K) Lysine decarb H2S
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Typical reaction Salmonella species
29Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Lysine Iron Agar (Red/A) Lysine deam H2S
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Typical reaction of Proteus
30Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Lysine Iron Agar (K/A) NC on slant, acid butt
H2S
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Typical reaction of some Citrobacter species
31Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Lysine Iron Agar (K/A)
Stab inoculate with a needle and streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Typical reaction of Shigella and Some E. coli
32Screening for Enteric Pathogens
- Christensens urea agar (another deep slant)
contains glucose, a pH buffer, urea, and
phenolphthalein as a pH indicator. - Urease produced by non-enteric pathogens growing
on this medium changes the urea to ammonia - Depending on the amount of ammonia produced, the
phenolphthalein color change ranges from a very
pale pink to darker pink or a deep fuschia - Salmonella and Shigella grow but do not produce
urease the medium remains pale - A positive urease rules out Salmonella and
Shigella - The Proteus group (Proteus, Morganella
Providencia) are urease positive
33(No Transcript)
34Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Christensens Urea Agar (Urease )
Streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Typical reaction of Salmonella and Shigella
species (as well as E. coli )
35Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Christensens Urea Agar (Urease weakly )
Streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Typical reaction of Citrobacter, Serratia, and
Klebsiella species rules Salmonella and
Shigella
36Screening for Enteric Pathogens
Christensens Urea Agar (Urease strongly )
Streak the slant
Incubate 35oC 12-24h with loose cap
Typical reaction of Proteus species Rules out
Salmonella and Shigella
37Summary KIA and LIA Screen for enteric pathogens
KIA Reactions X on test
LIA React. R/A K/K K/K K/A K/A
K/A- Prot. d Sal. a Sal. a Citr. d
K/K Pseud. c d
K/A- Prot. d Sal. a Edwr a. Edwr. a . Sal. a
b Sal. a b
K/A-- Morg. d Prov. d Sal. a Pleis. c Aerom.
a Shig. a
K/A Prot. d Sal. a Sal. a
Sal. a b Citr. d Citr. d
A/A- E. coli d Kleb. d E. coli d
Kleb. d Enter. d
A/A-- Serrat. d
a Indicates enteric pathogen, Sal. and Shig.
should be serotyped, b Indicates unusual
reaction, cOxidase positive d Not enteric
pathogen
38Serotyping
- Isolates presumptively identified as Salmonella
or Shigella should be confirmed by serotyping. - Isolates identified as Edwardsiella are not
usually serotyped but are sent to a reference lab
as this is an enteric pathogen - Enteropathogenic E. coli (diarrhea, etc) can also
be serotyped - Enterics have three types of antigens which can
be detected by agglutination tests O (somatic),
K or Vi, and H antigens. - Somatic (of the body or of the body wall) or O
antigens are heat stable and are part of the Gram
(-) bacterial cell wall - K or Vi antigens are heat labile and, if
present, represent the bacterial capsule. These
are the most external antigens, and therefore can
mask the presence of O antigens (ie. will not
show up on agglutination test). K is for the
German Kapsule, and Vi is derived from the word
envelope.
39Serotyping
- H antigens, if present, are also heat labile
and are part of the bacterial flagella - Since K and H antigens are heat labile they can
be removed by boiling the culture for 15 min. - After boiling, cultures are tested for somatic
antigens. Somatic antigen is the primary antigen
used to group (serological groups or serotypes)
Salmonella Shigella isolates via antigenic
relatedness - 95 of human clinically significant Salmonella
belong to the somatic groups A through G - S. typhi belongs to group D, and S. paratyphi to
group C - Reference labs serotype these isolates using K
and H antigens as well for confirmation. Most S.
typhi strains and a few paratyphoid biotypes
also posses the K antigen.
40Serotyping
- Three types of antigens possessed by enterics
H
41Serotyping
- Shigella species are divided into four somatic
groups, A through D, each corresponding to a
different species S. dysenteriae (A), S.
flexneri (B), S. boydii (C), and S. sonnei (D) - Any Shigella species may also possess K antigens,
but since they are nonmotile they never posses H
antigens - Enteropathogenic E. coli are relatively hard to
detect serologically, but most can be serotyped
similarly to Salmonella and Shigella - E. coli O157H7 is a well known serotype but
there are others - Serotyping each E. coli isolated from feces is
impractical - Detecting them by culture is a problem because
most toxigenic E. coli have the same cultural
characteristics as indigenous colon E. coli, but
we did discuss a few ways to do this earlier -
SMAC - Some labs make available to the physician
serological procedures that test for the various
toxins produced by E. coli directly from the
stool specimen
42Serotyping
- The LGH Micro lab evaluated the following
approach - For 1 year a direct ELISA test for the verotoxin
(shiga) was run on every stool received for
enteric pathogen culture only three were found
to be positive in the 12-month period - Since each test cost about 10 the procedure was
deemed not to be cost effective - The current policy of the LGH Micro lab is to
culture all stools on SMAC and test only
colorless colonies for the Shiga toxin with an
ELISA procedure - This is not optimum because some EHEC strains
have been shown to be sorbitol positive.
Additionally, this procedure does not deal with
other enteropathogenic E. coli serotypes - Until research finds cost effective ways of
detecting all EHEC and other enteropathogenic E.
coli, the LGH method will have to suffice
43Clinical Significance
- Enterics that cause primary intestinal infections
include typhoidal and non-typhoidal Salmonella
species (S. enteritidis), toxigenic strains of E.
coli, Shigella species, and Yersinia
entercolitica - Enterics that do not cause intestinal infections
can be associated with several extraintestinal
infections as discussed previously - includes
UTIs, LRT infections, GI tract, systemic, etc - 90 of modern non-intestinal enteric infections
are caused by only three species E. coli, K.
pneumoniae, and P. mirabilis - See following table for summary of common disease
associations
44Enterics and Common Infections They Produce
Bacterial Species
Diseases E. coli UTI,
septicemia, neonatal sepsis,
diarrheal syndromes Shigella Diarrhea,
dysentery Edwardsiella Diarrhea, wound
infections, enteric fever Citrobacter Oppor
tunistic and nosocomial infections (wounds,
UTI)
Slides 44-47 not on test --------?
45Enterics and Common Infections They Produce
Bacterial Species
Diseases Klebsiella UTI, pneumonia, septicemia,
wounds Enterobacter Opportunistic and
nosocomial infections (UTI and
wounds) Serratia Opportunistic and
nosocomial infections (wound,UTI,
sepsis) Proteus UTI, wound infection, sepsis
46Enterics and Common Infections They Produce
Bacterial Species
Diseases Providencia and Opportunistic and
nosocomial Morganella infections (UTI, wound,
sepsis) Yersinia pestis Bubonic and
pneumonic plague Yersinia entercolitica Diarrhea,
mesenteric lymph- adenitis (mimicking
appendicitis) Salmonella Diarrhea, enteric
fever, septicemia
47Intestinal Illness caused by E. coli
Virulence Factor not known for sure
heat labile and stable enterotoxin direct
penetration spreadingfactors Shiga-like toxin,
verotoxin, strongly adhere to mucosa
Category
Major Symptoms infantile diarrhea, fever,
vomiting travelers diarrhea, cramps
dysentery,bloody stool, cramps, fever bloody
diarrhea, colitis, HUS diarrhea,
vomiting abdominal pain
Enteropathogenic (EPEC) Enterotoxigenic (ETEC) En
teroinvasive (EIEC) Enterohemorrhagic (EHEC)
(STEC) Enteroadherent (EAEC)
48Virulence Factors
- All Gram-negative bacteria (not only pathogens)
possess lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in the outer
membrane of their cell envelope (membrane(s)
wall) - During an infection, the envelope can be degraded
by phagocytic cells or due to antibiotic therapy.
LPS can also be introduced in injectable drugs,
IV solution, etc. - Fragments of the lipid A portion of the LPS
function as endotoxin in the body. Compared to
exotoxins, endotoxin is heat stable, relatively
(generally) mild in its affect, and less specific
in its affect. - Endotoxin stimulates phagocytic cells to release
interleukin-1 (IL-1, formerly known as
endogenous pyrogen). Il-1 travels to the
hypothalamus via the blood circulation triggering
an increase in body temperature (fever)
49Virulence Factors
- Il-1 also stimulates phagocytes to release
another cytokine, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) or
cachectin (ku-kek-tin) - This substance binds to tissues in the body
causing damage. One example is TNF causing
damage to blood capillaries causing them to
become leaky. Severe cases are sufficiently
acute to result in septic shock. A massive dose
of endotoxin would be required for such as this
it is very rare. - Endotoxin can cause GI pathology which is usually
mild - Endotoxin can also cause diffuse intravascular
coagulation - Typhoid fever is a prime example of a disease in
which endotoxin causes a significant amount of
the pathology
50Virulence Factors a few examplesX on test
- Klebsiella pneumoniae large capsule that
interferes with phagocytosis and aids in alveolar
attachment - Shigella Shiga-like toxin, a very potent
enterotoxin - enteropathogenic E. coli verotoxin, surface
protein for adherence to intestinal mucosa - Proteus Urease, produces a large quantity of
ammonia in the kidney during upper UTI which is
toxic to renal parenchyma - Salmonella direct invasion of mucosa,
anti-phagocytosis, enterotoxigenic, those that
produce enteric fever invade the blood stream - Yersinia directly invade mucosa,
anti-phagocytosis, enterotoxin
51Antimicrobial susceptibility X on test
- Susceptibility to antibiotics varies
- Most E. coli involved in community acquired UTI
are susceptible to many antibiotics. Most
hospital strains become resistant to a myriad
of antibiotics - K. pneumonia is almost always resistant to
ampicillin - Enterobacter are resistant to first generation
cephalosporins - Proteus mirabilis is intrinsically resistant to
nitrofurantoin and tetracycline, both frequently
used for treating UTI - Providencia, Morganella, and Serratia are
multi-resistant - often plasmid mediated and can
easily be passed to other enterics via
conjugation - Enteric isolates thought to be causing an
infection are almost always tested in vitro with
a large battery of antimicrobial agents
52Intestinal Diseases Caused by Non Enterics
- There are several bacteria that cause intestinal
infections other than the enterics. Some grow on
the enteric media used for primary isolation from
clinical specimen (ex. MacConkey agar), and they
often produce colonies indistinguishable from
enterics - The Vibrio group (Vibrio, Aeromonas, and
Pleisiomonas) is one of these, and must be
differentiated from the enterics - Members of the Vibrio group are oxidase positive,
a fact allowing quick differentiation from
enterics - Cells from a sweep of a primary isolation plate
to collect cells from each representative colony
can be tested for oxidase. If the test is
oxidase positive, each colony is them tested
individually to find the positive colony, and
additional testing can be conducted.