Litmus milk explained

Litmus milk is a milk-based medium used to distinguish between different species of bacteria.[1] The lactose (milk sugar), litmus (pH indicator), and casein (milk protein) contained within the medium can all be metabolized by different types of bacteria.[2]

Early in the development of microbiology, milk was used as a convenient, rich growth medium for propagating bacteria. The litmus in the medium acts as both a pH indicator and a redox (oxidation-reduction) indicator. The test itself tells whether the bacterium can ferment lactose, reduce litmus, form clots, form gas, or start peptonization.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Elizabeth A. . Schierl . Donna J. . Blazevic. Rapid Identification of Enterococci by Reduction of Litmus Milk. Journal of Clinical Microbiology. 14. 2. 227–228. August 1981. 6895080 . 271939.
  2. Web site: Litmus Milk Results and Meanings . clark.edu.
  3. Web site: Litmus Milk Medium Data Sheet . https://web.archive.org/web/20110715094437/http://www.pmlmicro.com/assets/TDS/455.pdf . 15 July 2011 . dead .