Glucose Bromocresol Purple Agar | Tryptone Yeast Extract Agar (Purple) | AS‑1240
Glucose Bromocresol Purple Agar
Tryptone Yeast Extract Agar with Bromocresol Purple (TYEA-BCP)
ISO-validated differential agar for glucose fermentation detection in Enterobacteriaceae and Bacillus cereus confirmation workflows. Distinctive purple-to-yellow colour transition provides unambiguous fermentation readout across food, feed, environmental, and clinical matrices.
🏆 Food Microbiology Specialist
🟡 Yellow = Glucose fermented (acid)
🔬 Technical Overview & Biochemistry
Glucose Bromocresol Purple Agar (also known as Tryptone Yeast Extract Agar with BCP or TYEA-BCP) is a non-selective, differential medium that exploits the acidometric properties of bromocresol purple to visually distinguish glucose-fermenting organisms from non-fermenters. The medium's biochemical logic is elegantly simple:
↓ (Glycolytic pathway — fermentative organisms)
Organic acids (lactic acid, acetic acid, mixed acids)
↓ (pH drops below 6.8)
BCP indicator: Purple (pH ≥6.8) → Yellow (pH ≤5.2)
Bromocresol purple (BCP) is a sulfonephthalein pH indicator with a transition range of pH 5.2 (yellow) to pH 6.8 (purple), pKa ≈ 6.3. When fermenting organisms metabolise glucose to organic acids, the pH falls below 5.2 and the indicator transitions from purple to a clear yellow, providing an unambiguous visual signal without chromogenic substrates or additional reagents.
🧪 Detailed Ingredients Table
📊 Comparative Media for B. cereus & Enterobacteriaceae Detection
⚖️ Structured Pros & Cons Analysis
✅ Advantages
- Visual clarity — BCP colour change is unambiguous; requires no UV lamp or additional reagents
- Dual workflow utility — single medium for both Enterobacteriaceae screening and B. cereus glucose confirmation
- ISO 21258-1 compliant — accepted in regulatory food safety testing programmes globally
- Non-selective base — recovers stressed and sublethally injured cells without selective pressure
- Localised pH zones — acid halos form around fermenting colonies in mixed culture, enabling direct colony-level differentiation
- Stable indicator — BCP remains stable through autoclave sterilisation
⚠️ Limitations
- Non-selective — background flora grows freely; not suitable as a primary isolation medium in heavily contaminated samples without prior enrichment
- Glucose only — does not differentiate lactose, sucrose or other sugar fermentation patterns alone
- Overheating risk — excessive autoclaving degrades glucose (caramelisation) and can shift baseline pH, producing false yellow background
- High glucose concentration — 10 g/L may suppress growth of some fastidious anaerobes through catabolite repression
- Not for B. cereus presumptive count — requires MYP or PEMBA as primary selective plate; GBCP is a confirmation step only
🧬 Applications
🍽️ Food Microbiology
Primary use in ISO 21258-1 workflows for Enterobacteriaceae enumeration and ISO 7932 confirmation step for presumptive Bacillus cereus colonies. Validated for cereals, dairy, meat, herbs, spices, infant formula, and processed foods.
🌿 Confirmation of B. cereus
Following presumptive identification on MYP (ISO 7932), suspect colonies are subcultured onto GBCP agar. B. cereus produces yellow colonies (glucose+, acid); confirmation is reinforced by the characteristic glucose-positive, mannitol-negative biochemical profile.
🔬 Enterobacteriaceae Screening
Non-selective differential plating for Enterobacteriaceae from food and environmental samples. All family members ferment glucose, producing yellow colonies with acid halos, allowing simple primary screening from enriched cultures.
🏭 Pharmaceutical & Feed QC
Used in pharmaceutical raw material and animal feed microbiological testing for Enterobacteriaceae absence/presence and carbohydrate fermentation profiling. Suitable for automated colony reading systems due to high colour contrast.
Additional Application Areas:
- Biochemical Identification Panels: Carbohydrate utilisation profiling for unknown isolates
- Clinical Microbiology: Confirmation of glucose-fermenting Gram-negative enteric pathogens
- Research: Metabolic screening of novel bacterial isolates for fermentative capacity
- Environmental Monitoring: Water and environmental surface sampling post-enrichment plating
- Teaching & Training: Visual demonstration of fermentation biochemistry for microbiology education
- QA/QC Laboratories: Rapid positive/negative fermentation screening in industrial settings
🔎 Colony Appearance & Interpretation Guide
💡 Preparation & Protocol Guidelines
Suspend 41.5 g/L in distilled water. Heat to boiling with gentle agitation. DO NOT overheat — caramelisation of glucose will produce false yellow background.
Autoclave 121°C / 15 min. Cool to 45–50°C before pouring. Avoid remelting.
30°C for 24–48 h (Enterobacteriaceae); 30°C for 24–48 h (B. cereus confirmation)
2–8°C, protected from direct light. Use within 4 weeks of preparation.
📋 Technical Specifications
| Catalogue Number | AS-1240 |
| Common Name | Glucose Bromocresol Purple Agar |
| Synonyms | TYEA-BCP; Tryptone Yeast Extract Agar with BCP; GBCP Agar |
| pH (25°C) | 7.0 ± 0.2 |
| Suspension Rate | 41.5 g/L (approx. 24 L per kg) |
| Appearance (powder) | Light yellow, homogeneous, free-flowing powder |
| Appearance (prepared) | Purple, clear to slightly opalescent gel |
| Sterilisation | Autoclave 121°C, 15 min — do not overheat |
| Incubation Temp. | 30°C ± 1°C (aerobic) |
| Incubation Time | 24–48 hours |
| Storage (powder) | 2–25°C, dry, tightly sealed |
| Storage (plates) | 2–8°C, protected from direct light |
| Available Sizes | 100 g, 500 g, 5 kg |
📜 Regulatory & Standards Compliance
- ✓ ISO 21258-1:2017 — Microbiology of food chain; detection & enumeration of B. cereus presumptive
- ✓ ISO 7932:2004 — Horizontal method for enumeration of presumptive B. cereus (confirmation agar)
- ✓ ISO 21528 — Enumeration of Enterobacteriaceae (confirmation supplement)
- ✓ FDA BAM — Referenced in Bacteriological Analytical Manual for glucose fermentation confirmation
- ✓ FSANZ / DAFF — Compatible with Australian food microbiology regulatory requirements
🧫 Quality Control Organisms
| Organism | ATCC | Growth | Colour |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacillus cereus | 11778 | ✓ Good | 🟡 Yellow |
| Escherichia coli | 25922 | ✓ Good | 🟡 Yellow |
| Salmonella typhimurium | 14028 | ✓ Good | 🟡 Yellow |
| Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 27853 | ✓ Good | 🟣 Purple |
| Bacillus subtilis | 6633 | ✓ Good | 🟣 Purple |
🔄 Cross-Reference / Equivalent Products
| Supplier | Product Name | Cat. No. |
|---|---|---|
| Merck / Millipore | Glucose Bromocresol Purple Agar (NutriSelect® Plus) | 16447 |
| HiMedia | Tryptone Yeast Extract Agar w/ BCP | M1896 |
| Oxoid | Tryptone Yeast Extract Agar with BCP | CM1054 |
| Thermo Fisher | Glucose BCP Agar (Dehydrated) | LP0021 |
✅ Quality Assurance
- ✓ pH Verified: 7.0 ± 0.2 per lot
- ✓ Growth Promotion: 5 QC organisms per batch (≤100 CFU inoculum)
- ✓ Indicator Performance: Purple → yellow confirmed with E. coli ATCC 25922
- ✓ Negative Reaction: Purple retention confirmed with P. aeruginosa ATCC 27853
- ✓ COA Issued: Certificate of Analysis with every order
🧫 Complete B. cereus & Enterobacteriaceae Testing System
Primary Selective & Differential Media
Enrichment Broths & Confirmation Reagents
Need Food Microbiology Protocol Support?
Our microbiologists can assist with ISO 7932 / ISO 21528 workflows, B. cereus confirmation protocols, and food safety testing method validation
For laboratory, research, and industrial use only. Not for food, feed, household, cosmetic, therapeutic, or personal use.
AuSaMicS Pty Ltd • ABN: 56 676 640 467 • 31 Longview CT, Thomastown, VIC 3074, Australia
Same-day dispatch • Australian stock • Full documentation included