Hello, take your stock solution and made decimal dilutions to understand the number of colony forming unit (CFU/ml) in your stock sample. Than after you can calculate the exact dilution for receiving approx. 1000 colonies.
You can never reach exactly 1000 bacteria in your sample. You must understand that dilution methods can reach given accuracy of the method.- It means you can obatin sample with the number of bacteria from approx. 950 to 1050.
Yes. You cant expect the exact number of bacteria. Instead you could calculate the cfu/ml as answered previously or go with McFarland's turbidity standard.
Data from viable plate counts are after the fact and not useful. Counts in dilution will not remain stable in the 24-48 hours incubation required for growth on plates. A standard curve - counts vs. OD is not gong to be sensitive enough to approximate 1000 cfu/ml though you could dilute from a higher count estimated from that curve. You could also use a hemocytometer and dilute appropriately but that's pretty labor intensive.
No such accurate method available to get exact 1000 no. of cells, mostly serial dilution technique is practiced.as mentioned in Karen's answer or you can use McFarland's turbidity standards.
Take the sprcific bacteria you need and culture on selective media of bacteria after incubaton for 24 hours spelect pure colony and put in nutrient broth for 18 hour and take loopful of colony and numerate the number of colony .
Hi Ramiz, The answers above are good practices to gain colony forming units (CFU) on solid agar media by using serial dilutions.
I would like to know more about the experiment, but an easy way to measure growth of a culture is taking the optical density (OD). If you want to go a step further you can do what Phil suggested and combine the optical density with serial dilutions and spread plating for colony forming units. By combining this data, you can find out the number of cells "cfu" per volume in your culture.
Some rercommendations are OK, but not one can give you a result, you are looking for, unfortunately. It is impossible to prepare sample with exactly 1000 bacteria.
Hello, believe me, if there was any possibility available for receiving exact numbers, you saw the exact numbers in all Certified Reference Materials for microbiology. So we all talking about approximal numbers, nothing else...