Selenite Broth (AS-1345) | Selenite F Enrichment Medium (Twin Pack)
Selenite Broth (Selenite F Broth)
Classical Selective Enrichment Medium for Salmonella Recovery
Selenite Broth, also known as Selenite F Broth, is a classical selective enrichment medium used worldwide for recovery of Salmonella spp. from food, water, clinical, and environmental samples. Its sodium selenite system suppresses many competing fecal and coliform organisms while allowing Salmonella to survive and multiply during short enrichment.
Classical Salmonella Enrichment Standard
Overview & Applications
Selenite Broth is a classical enrichment medium originally developed for the selective recovery of Salmonella from mixed microbial populations. It is widely used in food microbiology, clinical stool culture, water testing, and environmental monitoring workflows.
The selective action is based on sodium selenite, which inhibits many fecal coliforms and other competing enteric bacteria more strongly than it inhibits Salmonella. This selective balance allows short-term enrichment before transfer to solid selective and differential media.
- Primary enrichment of Salmonella from food and feed
- Stool, sewage, and environmental samples
- Pharmaceutical and water QC screening
- Routine Salmonella workflows in food microbiology labs
- Part of standard multi-step enrichment protocols
- Sodium selenite selectively inhibits many competing coliforms
- Supports recovery of sublethally injured Salmonella
- Buffered system helps maintain suitable enrichment conditions
- Fast enrichment typically within 6–18 hours
- Compatible with ISO, FDA-BAM, USP and related workflows
Complete Selenite Broth Formulation
Composition (per Liter)
| Component | Amount | Primary Function | Practical Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peptone | 5.0 g | Nutrient source | Supports growth and recovery of target organisms |
| Lactose | 4.0 g | Carbohydrate source | Helps moderate selenite toxicity during enrichment |
| Sodium Phosphate (dibasic) | 10.0 g | Buffering system | Helps maintain pH stability |
| Sodium Hydrogen Phosphate (monobasic) | 1.0 g | Buffering adjustment | Supports appropriate enrichment environment |
| Sodium Selenite | 4.0 g | Selective agent | Suppresses many competing Enterobacteriaceae and fecal flora |
Preparation, Incubation & Interpretation
Preparation
- Suspend 20 g of dehydrated medium in 1 L purified or distilled water.
- Warm gently with agitation until dissolved.
- Do not overheat, as selenite is heat-labile and excessive heating reduces performance.
- Dispense into tubes or bottles.
- Autoclaving is not recommended. Use a boiling water bath for about 10 minutes or follow validated manufacturer instructions.
- Cool to room temperature before inoculation.
Incubation
- Temperature: 35–37°C
- Duration: 6–24 hours
- Subculture promptly after enrichment
- Do not incubate beyond 24 hours, since prolonged exposure may inhibit even target organisms
Interpretation
- Selenite Broth is an enrichment medium and is not directly differential.
- After incubation, streak onto selective plating media such as XLD Agar, Hektoen Enteric Agar, Brilliant Green Agar, or Bismuth Sulfite Agar.
- Final presumptive interpretation is based on colony morphology on plated media and subsequent confirmatory testing.
Downstream Plating & Typical Colony Appearance
| Selective Agar | Typical Salmonella Appearance | Why Use It |
|---|---|---|
| XLD Agar | Red colonies with black centers | Good differential performance with H₂S indication |
| Hektoen Enteric Agar | Blue-green colonies, often with black centers | Useful for enteric differentiation |
| Brilliant Green Agar | Pink to white colonies in a red medium | Strong suppression of many competing flora |
| Bismuth Sulfite Agar | Black colonies with metallic sheen | Useful for selective recovery of certain Salmonella types |
Recommended Salmonella Detection Workflow
Use a non-selective pre-enrichment such as Buffered Peptone Water when recovery of stressed cells is required
Transfer into Selenite Broth for short selective enrichment of Salmonella
Plate onto XLD, HEA, BGA, or Bismuth Sulfite Agar
Confirm suspect colonies by biochemical, serological, or molecular testing
Strategic Use of Selenite Broth
Key Advantages
- Classical, widely recognized enrichment medium
- Good selective suppression of many competing fecal organisms
- Fast enrichment for routine screening workflows
- Compatible with multiple downstream selective agars
- Suitable for food, water, clinical, and environmental applications
Method Considerations
- Sodium selenite is toxic and must be handled carefully
- Do not autoclave; overheating reduces selectivity
- Not a differential medium — requires downstream plating
- Over-incubation may inhibit target recovery
Selection Guide
- Use for routine short-term selective enrichment of Salmonella
- Best when paired with downstream XLD, HEA, BGA, or BS plating
- Suitable for classical food microbiology and stool culture workflows
- Use validated laboratory SOPs for heating and handling
Quality Control & Reference Framework
Salmonella Typhimurium — expected enrichment growth
Escherichia coli, Klebsiella, Enterobacter — expected reduced recovery relative to target organisms
ISO 6579-1, FDA-BAM, USP <61>/<62>, WHO, ICMSF
Certificate of Analysis and lot-specific QC data available on request