Heatley NG, A method for the assay of penicillin. Biochem J.1944; 38(1): 61–65
A Method for the Assay of Penicillin
 
(received 18 December 1943) 
 
Practical details of the method  
 
i) Pouring the plates: 
     -------   4 in. Petri dishes are poured to a depth of 3-5mm with 
    a simple medium such as --------- 
ii) Seeding the plates:  
   Staphylococcus aureus, no.6571 of the National Collection of 
   Type Cultures, is used as test organism.-------- The plates are 
   seeded by placing on each a small volume of a 16-24 hr. broth 
   culture (or a 10-100-fold dilution of such a culture). -------- 
iii) Preparation of solutions for assay:    
    The pH of the solution should be within the range 5.0-8.0. 
iv) Placing and filling cylinders:  
---------  Carefully placed on the surface of the agar. There may 
   be a very brief sizzling sound (though the cylinder should scarcely 
   be hot enough to cause this) and a perfectly fluid-tight seal is 
   made between agar and the cylinder. The cylinders are not 
   pressed into agar. The solution to be assayed are then placed 
   in the cylinders, care being taken that there is no air space 
   between the fluid and the surface of the agar. The exact volume 
   of fluid seems to make little difference to the assay value, but 
   in practice the fluid is filled level with the top of the cylinder.
 
v) Specifications for cylinders:  
   The cylinders may be made of glass or vitreous porcelain, gazed 
  or ungazed. 9.6±0.2 mm, by 5.1±0.2 mm. internal diameter and
  7.2±0.1mm. external diameter. one end is bevelled internally 
  and the shape edge is ground perfectly plane; the other end is 
  colored for easy identification. ------------------
vi) Incubation:  
  ------ 37 incubator for 16-24 hr. Incubation is usually allowed to 
  proceed overnight but the zones of inhibition are quite distinct 
  after less than 10 hr. and, if left longer, increase in size only
  very slightly. ------------
vii) Measurement of zones of inhibition:
 
viii) Arranging standard and unknown solutions on the plates:  
   In prepare ring the plates a number of factors such as batch of 
  medium, length of autoclaving, drying time of plates, number 
  of times the incubator is opened during drying, density of 
  bacterial suspension used for seeding, etc., are not easy to 
  control in practice.  
 
     It has been found that the of the curve relating the diameter or 
  the zones of inhibition to Concentration of penicillin, as well as 
  the absolute assay value for any given sample, may vary from 
  day to day, probably depending on these variables.  
 
     Preliminary investigations showed that a quantitative study of 
  the effects involved would a lengthy and difficult task; the method 
  is still therefore largely empirical. It is, however, a simple matter 
  to determine the shape of the curve afresh each day by setting up 
  with the--------
 
ix) The penicillin standard:  
 
x) Reproducibility: limit of accuracy  
  A quantitative idea of the reproducibility of the method is afforded
  by a series of 27 assays of a given preparation against the same
  standard. Each single potency value was derived from the mean
  of four zone measurements, the values being 75, 75, 66, 77, 88.5, 
  63, 68, 72, ------------ 79, 63.5, 81, 73.  The coefficient of variation 
  of this series  (Series A) is 9.0% .  
 
      Two further series with ten assays in each were the following 
   results:  Series B: 56, 56, 62, 61, 51.5, 56.5, 57, 55, 56, 60; 
   coefficient of variation, 5.6%.   Series C: 70.5, 62, 72, 68.5,
  67, 72, 65, 71.5, 65, 68.5; coefficient of variation, 5.0% .
  ------------------
 
  The scatter within tests and between successive tests is illustrated
  by Table 1, which gives the zone measurements actually recorded
  for the standard solutions set up in a consecutive series of assays.
 
  -------- If 9% is taken as the coefficient of variation which may
  be expected, then for P=0.01 the limits of accuracy for a single
  assay in quadruplicate(i.e. a value derived from measurement
  of four zones) will be rise to +- 23.2%. For an assay in Triplicate
  the limits will be rise to +- 26.9% and for an assay derived from
  two zone measurements only they will be +- 36.7%. 
 
  For P=0.05, the limits will be +- 19.5%, +- 22.7% and 27.7%
  respectively. In series B and C the degree of reproductively
  was considerably greater than this, though the reason is not
  known.
  
xi) Possible modifications and applications of the method: 
   Substitutes for cylinders: 
       ------ instead of cylinders, circular disks of filter paper which 
   are merely placed on the surface of a seeded plate and impregnated 
   with the solution to be tested. 
     ----------
  Application to substance other than penicillin:
        Great caution must be exercised ------- when applied to other 
  antibiotics. If the inhibitor is not diffusible, the method is obviously 
  of no use. The composition of the agar may need spcial attention(e.g.
  the presence of peptones wpuld presumably interface with sulphonamides
  ; penicillin B or notatin gives large zones of inhibition in the presence
  of glucose, but not in its absebce).  --------
 
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Any questions:  write to Keiji Hagiwara, MD                                                                      keijihagiwara@gmail.com