Abstract

Summary. Sporulation of 7 strains of Clostridium perfringens (welchii) was investigated in 4 laboratory media. A method to induce rapid and simultaneous sporulation was attempted which involved obtaining a purely vegetative culture to inoculate the test media. Heat resistance of spores produced in the individual media by each of 4 selected strains was investigated. The clean spores for the heating tests were obtained by a special procedure which included chilling to 6° for a minimum of 1 week immediately following the usual incubation period, then centrifuging, resuspending to volume in 0.85% NaCl solution and pasteurizing at 75° for 20 min before subjecting to the heating tests. Morphology of each strain was studied using stained microscopic preparations from the 24 h sporulating cultures.In the Ellner medium spore counts approaching 107/ml were recorded and this medium appeared to be the most efficient when judged in terms of numbers of spores produced. In other media the counts were in the range 104‐105 spores/ml. Cooked meat medium yielded slightly higher spore counts than did either SEC broth or modified Wagenaar & Dack medium, the latter contained in a dialysis sac apparatus. A period of chilling to 6° for a minimum of 1 week following incubation enhanced maturation in all cultures except those grown in SEC broth for 24 h or 15 days and those grown 15 days in the modified Wagenaar & Dack medium.Considerable heat resistance, expressed as percentage spore survival, was recorded for spores of 4 strains when heated at 80°, and heat resistance generally increased with lengthening of incubation time for the culture. Survival of spores heated at 100° for 10 min was usually less than 0.01% but spores in SEC broth after 15 days showed a somewhat greater heat resistance than the others. In no instance did total destruction of spores occur at 100°.

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