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ColonyForming

Colony-forming describes the ability of microorganisms, particularly bacteria and fungi, to reproduce on solid growth media to form discrete colonies. In practice, the term is often tied to colony-forming units (CFU), a common metric used to estimate the number of viable, replicating cells in a sample. A CFU is defined as a colony that results from a single viable cell or from a minimal cluster capable of growth under the assay conditions; thus CFU counts reflect viable cells rather than all cells present.

Colony-forming assays typically begin with a sample that is serially diluted and plated onto solid agar. After

Applications of colony-forming counting include assessment of microbial load in clinical samples, foods and beverages, water,

Interpretation must consider factors such as plating efficiency, clumping of cells, choice of media and incubation

incubation,
individual
colonies
are
counted
on
plates
containing
a
suitable
medium.
The
number
of
CFUs
per
unit
volume
or
weight
is
calculated
by
multiplying
the
counted
colonies
by
the
dilution
factor.
Variants
of
the
method
include
spread
plate
and
pour
plate
techniques,
and
sometimes
broth-to-plate
transfers
for
more
accurate
estimation.
and
environmental
samples;
evaluation
of
sterilization
efficacy;
and
monitoring
of
fermentation
processes.
The
method
provides
a
practical
measure
of
viable,
culturable
cells,
though
it
does
not
detect
cells
that
are
viable
but
nonculturable
under
the
chosen
conditions,
nor
does
it
always
distinguish
species
without
further
testing.
conditions,
and
potential
growth
inhibitors.
Colony
morphology
and
size
can
also
give
qualitative
clues
about
identity
and
health
of
cultures.