MacConkey agar
[Image:Proteus McConkey.jpg|thumb|right|With an active lactose non-fermenting bacterial culture|alt=Plate with pale pink agar growing colorless colonies under text reading Proteus vulgaris]
Image:Lactose v2.svg|thumb|Lactose
MacConkey agar is a selective and differential culture medium for bacteria. It is designed to selectively isolate gram-negative and enteric bacteria and differentiate them based on lactose fermentation. Lactose fermenters turn red or pink on MacConkey agar, and nonfermenters do not change color. The media inhibits growth of gram-positive organisms with crystal violet and bile salts, allowing for the selection and isolation of gram-negative bacteria. The media detects lactose fermentation by enteric bacteria with the pH indicator neutral red.
Contents
It contains bile salts, crystal violet dye, and neutral red dye.Composition:
- Peptone – 17 g
- Proteose peptone – 3 g
- Lactose – 10 g
- Bile salts – 1.5 g
- Sodium chloride – 5 g
- Neutral red – 0.03 g
- Crystal violet – 0.001 g
- Agar – 13.5 g
- Water – add to make 1 litre; adjust pH to 7.1 +/− 0.2
- Sodium taurocholate
History
The medium was developed by Alfred Theodore MacConkey while working as a bacteriologist for the Royal Commission on Sewage Disposal.Uses
Using neutral red pH indicator, the agar distinguishes those gram-negative bacteria that can ferment the sugar lactose from those that cannot.This medium is also known as an "indicator medium" and a "low selective medium". Presence of bile salts inhibits swarming by Proteus species.