EMB Agar: Composition, Principle, and Colony Morphology | Microbe Online (2024)

Written by Acharya Tankeshwar

in Culture MediaLast Updated December 27, 2023

Eosin Methylene Blue (EMB) agar is a selective and differential culture medium. It selectively promotes the growth of Gram-negative bacteria and aids in the differentiation of lactose fermenter and non-lactose fermenting colonies.

EMB Agar is used for the isolation of fecal coliforms. EMB Agar can be streaked for isolation or used in the Membrane Filter Technique. EMB agar inoculated with Escherichia coli demonstrates growth with green-metallic sheen colonies.

EMB agar, first described by Holt-Harris and Teague, contained lactose and sucrose as sources of carbohydrates. Levine modified the medium by adding peptone and phosphate, removing sucrose from the formula, and increasing the lactose content.This aided in differentiating fecal and non-fecal types of coliforms. It also differentiates salmonellae and other non-lactose fermenters from the coliforms.

Another commonly used media for selective isolation of Gram-negative rods and differentiation of the member of Enterobacteriaceae as lactose fermenter and non-lactose fermenter is MacConkey Agar.

Table of Contents

Principle

EMB agar contains sucrose and lactose, utilized as fermentable carbohydrates substrates, which encourage the growth of some gram-negative bacteria, especially fecal and non-fecal coliforms. Differentiation of enteric bacteria is possible due to the presence of the sugars lactose and sucrose in the EMB agar and the ability of certain bacteria to ferment the lactose in the medium.

  • Lactose-fermenting gram-negative bacteria acidify the medium, which reduces the pH, and the dye produces a dark purple complex usually associated with a green metallic sheen. This metallic green sheen indicates vigorous lactose and/or sucrose fermentation ability typical of fecal coliforms.
  • Organisms that are slow lactose-fermenters produce less acid, and the colonies appear brown-pink.
  • Non-lactose fermenters increase the pH of the medium by deamination of proteins and produce colorless or light pink colonies.

Eosin Y and methylene blue are pH indicator dyes that combine to form a dark purple precipitate at low pH; they also inhibit the growth of most Gram-positive organisms. Peptic digest of animal tissue is a source of carbon, nitrogen, and other essential growth nutrients. Phosphate buffers the medium.

Composition of EMB Agar

The composition of EMB agar and modified EMB agar (Levine EMB) agar differs slightly. Levine modification contains 10g of lactose (twice as in EMB agar) and no sucrose.

IngredientsEMB agar (gm/L)Levine EMB agar (gm/L)
Peptone10 g10g
Lactose5 g10g
Sucrose5g
Dipottasium,PO42g2g
Agar13.5g13.5g
Eosin Y0.4g0.4g
Methylene blue0.065g0.065g

Preparation of EMB agar

  1. Weigh and suspend 35.96 grams of dehydrated media in 1000 ml distilled water.
  2. Mix until the suspension is uniform and heat to boiling to dissolve the medium completely.
  3. Sterilize byautoclaving at 15 lbs pressure (121°C) for 15 minutes.
  4. Cool to 45-50°C, and with frequent gentle swirling, pour the media into sterile Petri plates. Note: frequent swirling is recommended to restore the blue color o methylene blue and to suspend the flocculent precipitate, if any.
  5. Label with initials of the name of the medium, and the date of preparation.
  6. Store the plates upside down (lids below) in the refrigerator until use.

Colony Morphology

OrganismColonial appearance on EMB agar
Escherichia coliColonies are 2-3 mm in diameter and have a greenish metallic sheen in reflected light, dark or even black center in transmitted light.
Enterobacter aerogenesColonies are 4-6mm in diameter, raised and mucoid, tending to become confluent.
No metallic sheen, grey-brown centers by transmitted light
Salmonella and Shigella sppTranslucent and colorless colonies
Pseudomonas sppColorless irregular colonies
Proteus sppColorless colonies
Gram-positive cocciPartially inhibited or no growth
Coagulase-positive staphylococciColorless, “pin-point” colonies on modified EMB

Quality Control of EMB agar

Sterility testing can be performed by incubating 3-5% uninoculated plates from each batch at 37°C for 18-24 hours. Any growth in the media should be regarded as contamination, and the whole lot should be discarded.

Performance testing of prepared EMB agar plates can be done by inoculating known strains of bacteria into the medium and observing growth and colonial characteristics.

OrganismGrowth and colony characteristics
E.coli ATCC 25922Good growth, blue-black colonies with a green metallic sheen
Salmonella choleraesuis subsp. Choleraesuis serotype Typhimurium ATCC 14028Luxuriant growth, colorless to amber colonies
Enterococcus faecalis ATCC 29212Inhibition (partial)
Shigella flexneri ATCC 12022Moderate to heavy growth, colorless to amber colonies

Uses of EMB agar

Isolation and differentiation of lactose fermenting and non-lactose fermenting enteric bacilli.

  1. EMB agar is used in water quality tests to distinguish coliforms and fecal coliforms that signal possible pathogenic microorganism contamination in water samples (presence of E.coli in the water sample indicates the possibility of fecal contamination of water, so does the presence of other pathogenic enterics).
  2. EMB media assists in thevisual distinction of Escherichia coli,other nonpathogenic lactose-fermenting enteric gram-negative rods, and theSalmonellaandShigellagenera. Escherichia coli colonies grow with a metallic sheen with a dark center. Aerobacter aerogenes colonies have a brown center, and non-lactose-fermenting gram-negative bacteria appear pink.
  3. EMB agar is also used to differentiate the organisms in the colon-typhoid-dysentery group. For culture of Salmonella and Shigella, selective medium such as MacConkey agar and EMB agar is commonly used.
  4. Levine EMB Agar can be used to isolate and identify Candida albicans from clinical specimens. Addition of 0.1g/L of chlortetracycline hydrochloride after autoclaving makes the medium selective by inhibiting the accompanying bacterial flora. The culture medium then is blue in color. Colonies of Candida albicans appear `spidery’ or `feathery’ after 24 to 48 hours of incubation at 35°C in 10% carbon dioxide. OtherCandidaspecies produce smooth yeast-like colonies.

References and further readings

  • ASMscience | Eosin-Methylene Blue Agar Plates Protocol. Retrieved June 12, 2020, from https://www.asmscience.org/content/education/protocol/protocol.2869
  • Welcome to Microbugz—Eosin Methylene Blue Agar. Retrieved June 12, 2020, from https://www.austincc.edu/microbugz/eosin_methylene_blue_agar.php
  • Eosin Methylene Blue Agar (EMB). (2016, April 12). Biology LibreTexts.

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Acharya Tankeshwar

Hello, thank you for visiting my blog.I am Tankeshwar Acharya. Blogging is my passion. As an asst. professor, I am teaching microbiology and immunology to medical and nursing students at PAHS, Nepal. I have been working as a microbiologist at Patan hospital for more than 10 years.

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EMB Agar: Composition, Principle, and Colony Morphology | Microbe Online (2024)

FAQs

EMB Agar: Composition, Principle, and Colony Morphology | Microbe Online? ›

EMB agar is characterized by the presence of a combination of the two dyes eosin and methylene blue in the ratio of 6:1. Gram-negative bacteria that ferment the lactose produce acid which lowers the pH. This encourages dye absorption by the colonies and turns the colonies dark purple as the acid acts upon the dyes.

What is the colony morphology of EMB? ›

EMB contents

Strong acidity produces a deep purple colony with a green metallic sheen, whereas less acidity may produce a brown-pink coloration of colony. Nonlactose fermenters appear as translucent or pink. Colonies of lactose fermenters will appear very dark purple, or have dark purple centers.

What is the principle of EMB agar? ›

EMB agar is selective for gram-negative bacteria. The dye methylene blue in the medium inhibits the growth of gram-positive bacteria; small amounts of this dye effectively inhibit the growth of most gram-positive bacteria (8).

What are the ingredients in EMB agar? ›

EMB contains the following ingredients: peptone, lactose, dipotassium phosphate, eosin Y (dye), methylene blue (dye), and agar. There are also EMB agars that do not contain lactose.

What is the typical appearance of coliform colonies on EMB agar? ›

Coliforms, such as E. coli, form blue-black colonies with a green metallic sheen due to the amide bonding of the dyes in an acid condition.

What should the colony morphology be on EMB agar containing E. coli? ›

Typical E. coli colonies are small and pink on EMB agar with a green metallic sheen. It's quite an identifying characteristic, which helps in recognising them. green metallic sheen.

How do you identify a colony morphology? ›

Observing colony morphology is an important skill used in the microbiology laboratory to identify microorganisms. Colonies need to be well isolated from other colonies to observe the characteristic shape, size, color, surface appearance, and texture. Another important characteristic of a bacterial colony is hemolysis.

What is the purpose of EMB agar quizlet? ›

EMB agar is used to stain gram negative bacteria. It is used to isolate fecal coliforms(G- bacteria rod)*** .

Why does EMB agar turn green? ›

Lactose-fermenting coliforms, such as Escherichia coli, produce blue-black colonies with a green metallic sheen due to the amide bonding of the dyes in an acid condition. Other coliforms form mucoid, pink- brown colonies in a less acidic condition.

Is EMB agar complex or chemically defined? ›

EMB agar is an example of a selective medium, a differential medium, and a complex medium.

What makes EMB agar selective and differential? ›

The two dyes in this medium, eosin and methylene blue, act as selective agents to inhibit Gram-positive bacteria, but allow for the growth of Gram-negative bacteria. EMB enables differentiation of bacterial species that are coliforms due to its dyes and its lactose content.

How to prepare EMB agar? ›

Preparation Instructions

Suspend 36 grams of EMB Agar in 1000 mls of distilled water. Heat to dissolve the medium completely. Dispense and sterilize by autoclaving at 15 lbs. pressure (121 °C) for 15 minutes.

Can fungus grow on EMB agar? ›

Bacterial eosin methylene blue (EMB) media is well-suited to fungi, which acts as selective media to differentiate Gram-negative bacteria. EMB, known as “Levine's formulation”, is a selective and differential medium for Gram-negative bacteria. In EMB media, fungi even grow faster than Gram-negative bacteria.

What bacteria grow on EMB agar? ›

EMB agar is a selective culture medium for Gram-negative bacteria. It is primarily used for isolation and differentiation of lactose fermenting (forms coloured colonies) and non-lactose fermenting (form colourless colonies) enteric bacilli.

What do colorless colonies on EMB agar indicate? ›

Normally-colored or colorless colonies indicate that the organism ferments neither lactose nor sucrose and is not a fecal coliform. Escherichia coli often produces a metallic green sheen on EMB.

What are the colony characteristics of salmonella on EMB agar? ›

Coliforms produce blue- black colonies whereas Salmonella and Shigella colonies are colorless or have a transparent amber colour. Escherichia coli colonies may show a characteristic green metallic sheen due to the rapid fermentation of lactose.

What colonies grow on EMB agar? ›

EMB agar is also used to differentiate the organisms in the colon-typhoid-dysentery group: Escherichia coli colonies grow with a metallic sheen with a dark center, Aerobacter aerogenes colonies have a brown center and non-lactose-fermenting, gram-negative bacteria appear pink.

What characteristic of bacteria does EMB differentiate? ›

On EMB agar, the lactose, eosin and methylene blue provide a means to differentiate lactose fermenters (coliforms) from non-lactose-fermenting enterics such as Salmonella.

What are colorless colonies on EMB agar? ›

Normally-colored or colorless colonies indicate that the organism ferments neither lactose nor sucrose and is not a fecal coliform. Escherichia coli often produces a metallic green sheen on EMB.

What are the colony characteristics of Salmonella on EMB agar? ›

Coliforms produce blue- black colonies whereas Salmonella and Shigella colonies are colorless or have a transparent amber colour. Escherichia coli colonies may show a characteristic green metallic sheen due to the rapid fermentation of lactose.

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