Asparagine Broth
Asparagine Broth
Chemically Defined Medium for Mycobacterial Nitrate Reduction Testing
Catalog Number: AS-1125
Overview
Asparagine Broth is a minimal, chemically defined liquid medium used for the detection of nitrate reduction and denitrification activity in Mycobacterium species, including members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM).
The medium is a key component of the classical Wayne method and remains in use in reference and research laboratories for phenotypic differentiation of M. tuberculosis complex (typically nitrate-negative) from most NTM (typically nitrate-positive). L-asparagine serves as the sole carbon and nitrogen source, ensuring high specificity and reproducibility.
Nitrate reduction results in the formation of nitrite, which is detected by the development of a red colour following the addition of sulfanilic acid and α-naphthylamine reagents.
Applications
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Differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (negative) from non-tuberculous mycobacteria (usually positive)
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Detection of nitrate reductase activity in mycobacteria
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Component of standard phenotypic identification panels (with niacin, catalase, etc.)
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Reference method described in WHO, CLSI M24-A2, and national tuberculosis laboratory guidelines
Key Features & Benefits
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Chemically defined formulation with no complex nutrients
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Clear, colourless medium allows easy visual detection of positive reactions
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High specificity for mycobacterial nitrate reductase activity
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Long-established and well-validated reference method
Principle of the Medium
Mycobacteria capable of nitrate reduction convert nitrate to nitrite during incubation. Following incubation, nitrite is detected by the addition of sulfanilic acid and α-naphthylamine, producing a red colour. Organisms lacking nitrate reductase activity do not produce nitrite, and no colour develops unless nitrate is reduced beyond nitrite.
Composition (per litre)
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L-Asparagine (anhydrous) – 5.0 g
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Potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KH₂PO₄) – 1.0 g
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Disodium hydrogen phosphate (Na₂HPO₄) – 2.5 g
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Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate (MgSO₄·7H₂O) – 0.01 g
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Sodium citrate – 0.1 g
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Glycerol – 5.0 mL
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Potassium nitrate (KNO₃) – 1.0 g
Final pH: 6.6 ± 0.2 at 25 °C
Preparation
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Dissolve all components in 995 mL distilled water
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Adjust pH to 6.6 with 1 N NaOH or 1 N HCl if required
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Make up to 1 L with distilled water
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Dispense 3–4 mL into small screw-cap tubes (e.g. 13 × 100 mm)
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Sterilise by autoclaving at 121 °C for 10 minutes only
(do not over-sterilise) -
Cool to room temperature
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Prepared medium should remain clear and colourless
Inoculation & Incubation
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Inoculate heavily with fresh growth from Löwenstein–Jensen or Middlebrook 7H11 agar (1–2 loopfuls)
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Incubate at 36 ± 1 °C
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Examine at 3, 7, and 14 days
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Include an uninoculated control tube
Reading & Interpretation
After incubation:
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Add 0.5 mL Reagent A
(0.2 % sulfanilic acid in 5 N acetic acid) -
Add 0.5 mL Reagent B
(0.1 % α-naphthylamine in 5 N acetic acid)
Results:
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Red colour within 5–10 minutes: Positive (nitrite present)
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No colour: Negative
If no colour develops, add a small amount of zinc dust:
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Red colour after zinc: true negative
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No colour after zinc: false negative (nitrate reduced beyond nitrite)
Storage & Stability
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Prepared tubes: Store at 2–8 °C, protected from light
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Shelf life: Use within 6 months
Intended Use
For laboratory identification and research use only.
Not for direct clinical diagnostic use.
Quality & Compliance
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Classical reference medium for mycobacterial nitrate reduction testing
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Manufactured under controlled conditions for batch consistency
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Suitable for research, reference, and method-development laboratories
Customs & Trade Information
HS / AHECC Code: 3821.00.00
Prepared culture media for development or maintenance of microorganisms