Nitrate Reduction Test- Principle, Procedure, Types, Results, Uses (2024)

In the anaerobic respiration process, bacteria derive their required oxygen from nitrate (NO3) or can use NO3 as a terminal electron acceptor. In either of these processes, nitrate is first reduced to nitrite (NO2) and subsequently to other end products like molecular nitrogen gas (N2), ammonia (NH3), hydroxylamine, etc., or may not further reduce, based on the metabolism process of the bacterium or based on the enzymes present in the bacterium. Such bacteria are called nitrate-reducing bacteria (denitrifying bacteria). Nitrate-reducing bacteria play important roles in soil microbiology and maintaining ecology by recycling nitrogen. These bacteria produce nitrate reductase enzymes that reduce nitrate into nitrite.

Several clinically important bacteria also reduce nitrate. And identification of nitrate-reducing ability plays an important role in identifying several bacterial species. The laboratory biochemical test to determine the ability of bacteria to reduce the nitrate into nitrite is called the nitrate reduction test. In the laboratory, the nitrate-reducing ability of bacteria is tested by culturing bacteria in culture media with a nitrate compound and adding an acid solution of sulfanilic acid and alpha-naphthol.

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Objectives

  • To determine the nitrate-reducing ability (production of nitrate reductase enzyme production) of the test bacteria.
  • To identify the test bacteria based on biochemical profile.

Principle of Nitrate Reduction Test

Nitrate-reducing organisms produce nitrate reductase enzyme, which reduces the nitrate into nitrite. Thus formed nitrite reacts with acetic acid and forms nitrous acid. The nitrous acid is diazotized with the sulfanilic acid to form a colorless diazonium salt (diazotized sulfanilic acid). The colorless nitrite-sulfanilic acid, when combined with the dimethyl-naphthylamine (α-naphthol), a water-soluble red-colored azo dye (p-Sulfobenzene-azo-naphthylamine) is formed.

Nitrate Reduction Test- Principle, Procedure, Types, Results, Uses (1)

Some organisms can further reduce nitrite into other nitrogen compounds. In this case, there is no formation of red color although the nitrate compound is reduced by the bacteria. Similarly, if there is no nitrate reduction, then also, there is no formation of the red color. To differentiate these two cases, zinc dust is added to detect unreduced nitrate.

The added zinc reduces nitrate into nitrite and results in the formation of red-colored azo dye.

Requirements

Culture Media

Nitrate broth is used to test the bacteria’s ability to reduce nitrate.

Composition:

Peptone 20 grams

(If the test bacteria are fastidious, use 25 grams of heart infusion broth powder in place of peptone)

Potassium nitrate 2 grams

Distilled water 1000 mL

Preparation:

Mix the above-mentioned components in labeled proportion (while using ready-made agar, measure and mix with distilled water in exact quantity as directed by the manufacturer) and shake well to completely dissolve the mixture.

Transfer 4 mL of the medium into a 16 × 125 mm test tube (or more medium based on the volume of the test-tube or the amount which is enough to sink the Durham tube). Tighten the screw cap (or plug the tube with a cotton plug) and autoclave it at 121°C and 15 lbs pressure for 15 minutes.

(Note: the composition may vary based on manufacturing companies. The above-mentioned composition is taken from Leber, Amy L., editor-in-chief. (2016). Clinical microbiology procedures handbook (Fourth edition). Washington, DC : ASM Press 1752 N St., N.W., [2016]. )

Chemicals/Reagents

0.8% sulfanilic acid as reagent A. 0.5% -napthol as reagent B and pure Zinc metal dust are required.

Preparation of 0.8% sulfanilic acid (Regent A)

Sunfanilic acid 0.8 grams

Distilled water 70 mL

Glacial acetic acid 30 mL

Mix the sulfanilic acid with distilled water and heat it to dissolve completely. Cool the mixture then add acetic acid slowly. (Storing at 2 – 8°C, you can store for up to 3 months)

Preparation of 0.5% -naphthol (Reagent B)

-naphthol (N, N-dimethyl- α-napthylamine) 0.5 grams

Distilled water 70 mL

Glacial acetic acid 30 mL

Mix the glacial acetic acid with distilled water and slowly add the -napthol and mix completely by shaking. (Storing at 2 – 8°C, you can store for up to 3 months)

Equipment

Test tubes
Dropper
PPE and other general laboratory materials
Durham tubes
Autoclave
Bunsen burner
Test-tube holder
Micropipette
Inoculating loop

Nitrate disk (only for the disk method of nitrate reduction test of anaerobic bacteria)

Test organism (Sample bacteria)

Positive controls: E. coli ATCC 25922 as nitrate positive, gas negative

P. aeruginosa ATCC 27853 as nitrate positive, gas positive

Negative control: Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 19606 as nitrate negative

Procedure of Nitrate Reduction Test

For nitrate reduction tests, three methods, the tube method, the disk method, and the rapid method, are commonly used. Among these methods, the tube method is the most frequently used testing method.

Tube Method

  1. Autoclave test tubes with nitrate broth and invert Durham’s tube and let them cool to room temperature.
  2. In a tube, inoculate the test (sample) bacteria from an isolated colony of fresh (24 hours old) culture using an inoculating loop (or drop 2/3 drops of broth containing an overnight culture of the test organism).
  3. Incubate the tube at an appropriate temperature for the required time period.

* Glucose non-fermenting, Gram-negative bacilli at 25 to 30°C for 24 hours to 5 days.

* Other bacteria at 35 ±2°C for 24 hours to 5 days.

* Campylobacter spp. at 35 ±2°C for at least 3 days at anaerobic or microaerobic conditions.

  1. After 24 hours, look for visible growth and gas bubbles inside the Durham tube. If there is no gas and no visible growth, incubate the tube for the next 24 hours (or more based on test bacteria).
  2. If gas is present in the Durham tube in the culture of glucose non-fermenting bacteria, report the test as positive for nitrate reduction and gas production.
  3. If gas is not present in the Durham tube or if the test bacterium is a glucose fermenter, transfer 0.5 mL of well-mixed culture into another clean (need not to be sterile) test tube.
  • Add 3 drops of reagent A and mix well by shaking gently.
  • Add 3 drops of reagent B and mix well by shaking gently.
  • Observe for the development of red color within 2 minutes.
  • If no red color is developed, then add a small amount of zinc dust and observe for the development of the red color within 10 minutes.
  1. If there is no gas formation and no development of red color after the addition of both reagents A and B, reincubate the tubes and test accordingly after 48 hours and on the 5th day.

Disk Method

Used only for anaerobic organisms.

  1. On a fresh (24 hours/overnight old) culture of the test organism, place a nitrate disk in the area with heavy growth and incubate anaerobically for 24 to 48 hours.
  2. Place the nitrate disk on a clean glass slide or petri plate (need not be sterile).
  • Add 1 drop of reagent A.
  • Add 1 drop of the regent B.
  • Observe for the development of red color within 2 minutes.
  • If no red color is developed, then add a small amount of zinc dust and observe for the development of the red color within 5 minutes.

Rapid Method

May not be as effective as the tube method, but can be used for quick results if the organism is supposed to be a quick reducer of nitrate and multiply rapidly (have a very short generation time).

  1. Add 0.5 mL of nitrate broth in a clean test tube, autoclave it for 15 minutes at 15 lbs pressure and 121°C, and let it cool to room temperature.
  2. Inoculate the tube with a heavy inoculum of fresh bacterial culture.
  3. Incubate at 35°C for 2 hours.
  4. Add 2 drops of reagent A and 2 drops of reagent B and mix well.
  5. Observe for the development of red color within 2 minutes.
  6. If no red color is developed, add a small amount of zinc dust and observe for the development of the red color within 5 minutes.

Results and Interpretation of Nitrate Reduction Test

  1. Formation of gas bubbles (even a single bubble) in the culture of glucose non-fermenting bacteria = nitrate reduction positive, gas positive
  2. Formation of red color after the addition of reagents and presence of gas in Durham tube = nitrate reduction positive, gas positive
  3. Formation of red color after the addition of reagents and absence of gas in Durham tube = nitrate reduction positive, gas negative
  4. No red color formation after the addition of reagents A and B, and also, no red color formation after the addition of zinc dust = nitrate reduction positive (nitrate is reduced to nitrite, and nitrite is reduced to other nitrogen compounds, there is nothing left to turn red).
  5. No red color formation after the addition of reagents A and B, but the formation of red color after the addition of zinc dust = nitrate reduction negative (no nitrate has been reduced before adding zinc. Upon adding zinc, the untouched nitrate reduces to nitrite and produces the red color).
Nitrate Reduction Test- Principle, Procedure, Types, Results, Uses (2)

Quality Control

For checking the quality of the medium and reagents, we can use positive and negative control organisms as mentioned earlier. As for the test organism, label test tubes as “positive control, gas positive”, “positive control, gas negative”, and “negative control” and inoculate the tubes with P. aeruginosa ATCC 27853, E. coli ATCC 25922, and Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 19606 respectively. Follow all the procedures mentioned above and read the final result after the addition of reagents and zinc dust.

P. aeruginosa ATCC 27853 must give nitrate-positive (red color formation) and gas-positive results.

E. coli ATCC 25922 must give nitrate-positive (red color formation) and gas-negative results.

Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 19606 must give nitrate negative result (no red color formation).

Bacteria Showing Positive Result

E. coli, Salmonella typhimurium, Enterobacter spp., Bacillus cereus, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Citrobacter spp., Pseudomonas spp., Klebsiella spp., Proteus spp., S. aureus, etc.

Bacteria Showing Negative Result

Acinetobacter spp., Streptococcus spp., Mycobacterium bovis, M. africanum, etc.

Precautions

  • Sterilize the medium properly before use, sterilize the working area, work in a sterile zone, wear proper PPE, and follow laboratory safety rules.
  • Be careful while using -napthol as it is carcinogenic.
  • Use the appropriate amount of medium in a test tube based on the size of the available test tube and Durham tube. Durham tube must be completely submerged in the broth.
  • There must not be any gas bubbles in the Durham tubes before the test.
  • Don’t add too much zinc dust. It must not exceed the amount that adheres to the end of the applicator stick (like a toothpick)

Applications of Nitrate Reduction Test

  1. Understanding the biochemical characteristics of bacteria to identify them phenotypically.
  2. To differentiate Moraxella catarrhalis from Neisseria spp. and Kingella spp. from Neisseria spp. (N. gonorrhoeaeandK. denitrificans)
  3. Confirmation and identification of Enterobacterales.
  4. Differentiating Mycobacterium spp.
  5. Differentiating and identifying Corynebacterium spp.

Limitations of Nitrate Reduction Test

  1. It is not enough for the identification of bacterial species. It is only a part of the biochemical test; hence other tests are required for complete identification.
  2. Need of special medium containing nitrate (such as nitrate broth) but free from even small amount of nitrite.
  3. Difficult to notice the growth of organisms in the nitrate broth.
  4. Require verification by adding zinc dust to prevent reporting of false negative results if nitrite is further reduced to other nitrogen compounds.
  5. High chance of a false positive result if the zinc dust is added in a higher quantity.
  6. Need to know if the organism is a glucose fermenter with gas production or not before the nitrate reduction test and reporting.
  7. As it is a culture-based method, requires at least 24 hours to 5 days before reporting negative.

References

  1. Leber, Amy L., editor in chief. (2016). Clinical microbiology procedures handbook (Fourth edition). Washington, DC : ASM Press 1752 N St., N.W., [2016]
  2. Tille, P. M., & Forbes, B. A. (2014). Bailey & Scott’s diagnostic microbiology (Thirteenth edition.). St. Louis, Missouri: Elsevier.
  3. Rosier BT, Moya-Gonzalvez EM, Corell-Escuin P, Mira A. Isolation and Characterization of Nitrate-Reducing Bacteria as Potential Probiotics for Oral and Systemic Health. Front Microbiol. 2020 Sep 15;11:555465. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.555465. PMID: 33042063; PMCID: PMC7522554.
  4. Cowan & Steel’s Manual for identification of Medical Bacteria. Editors: G.I. Barron & R.K. Felthani, 3rd ed 1993, Publisher Cambridge University Press.
  5. Goh KS, Rastogi N. Simple and rapid method for detection of nitrate reductase activity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium canettii grown in the Bactec MGIT960 system. J Microbiol Methods. 2010 May;81(2):208-10. doi: 10.1016/j.mimet.2010.03.005. Epub 2010 Mar 15. PMID: 20298726.
  6. Nitrate Reduction Test – Principle, Procedure, Uses and Interpretation (microbiologyinfo.com)
  7. Nitrate Reduction Test: Principle, Procedure, Results • Microbe Online
  8. Nitrate Reduction Test Procedure, Principle, Result (microbiologynote.com)
  9. Nitrate Reduction – Biology LibreTexts
  10. Nitrate Reduction Test – Laboratoryinfo.com
  11. Nitrate reduction test: Objective, Principle, Procedure and Result – Online Biology Notes
  12. Nitrate reduction test Principle, Procedure, Result (medicallabtechnology.com)
  13. Nitrate Reduction Test: Objective, Principle, Procedure And Result Interpretation – BIOCHEMINSIDER
  14. Nitrate Reduction Test: Introduction, Principle, Procedure, result (universe84a.com)
Nitrate Reduction Test- Principle, Procedure, Types, Results, Uses (2024)

FAQs

What is the principle of nitrate reduction test? ›

Principle and Interpretation:

Zinc powder catalyses the reduction of nitrate to nitrite. Reduction of nitrate is generally an anaerobic respiration in which an organism derives its oxygen from nitrate. A red color will be produced in the medium only when nitrite is present in the medium.

What are the results of nitrate test? ›

If the nitrate broth turns red (tubes pictured in the center) after nitrate I and nitrate II are added, this color indicates a positive result. If instead, the tube turns red (tube pictured on the left) after the addition of Zn, this indicates a negative result.

What is the process of nitrate reduction? ›

DNRA is a two-step process. The first step is reduction of NO3 to NO2, and the second step is the reduction of NO2 to NH4+, each mediated by a distinct reductase enzyme.

What is the principle of nitrate determination? ›

The determination of nitrate is based on the method of Morris and Riley (1963) and modified by Strickland and Parsons (1968). Nitrate is reduced to nitrite using a cadmium-copper column. The nitrite produced reacts with sulfanilamide in an acid solution.

What are the 2 positive results of the nitrate reduction test? ›

34–1 Nitrate/nitrite tube test illustrating nitrate reduced to nitrite, resulting in a red color (left tube; positive result); addition of zinc dust to an initially colorless broth, resulting in formation of a red color (middle tube; negative result); no color change after addition of zinc dust, indicating that nitrite ...

How to perform a nitrate test? ›

A common nitrate test, known as the brown ring test can be performed by adding iron(II) sulfate to a solution of a nitrate, then slowly adding concentrated sulfuric acid such that the acid forms a layer below the aqueous solution.

What is the two step process of the nitrate reduction test procedure? ›

Determination of nitrate reduction to nitrite is a two step process. First, the reduction of nitrate to nitrite is determined by the addition of Nitrate Reagents A and B, then if necessary, the reduction of nitrate beyond nitrite is determined by the addition of Nitrate Reagent C (zinc dust).

What is the process that reduces nitrate? ›

The microbial processes of denitrification and dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) are two important nitrate reducing mechanisms in soil, which are responsible for the loss of nitrate ( NO 3 − ) and production of the potent greenhouse gas, nitrous oxide (N2O).

What are the benefits of nitrate reduction? ›

The reduction of nitrate to nitrite by the oral microbiota has been proposed to be important for oral health and results in nitric oxide formation that can improve cardiometabolic conditions.

Why is a nitrate test important? ›

Major sources of nitrate contamination can be from fertilizers, animal waste, and human sewage. It is highly recommended to test your drinking water supply on a regular basis. Elevated levels of nitrate in drinking water can cause Blue Baby Syndrome in infants under six months of age and that are bottle fed.

What are the first two reagents required to perform the nitrate reduction test? ›

NITRATE TEST

With this enzyme, nitrate is reduced to nitrite (NO2). It then forms nitrous acid that reacts with the first reagent sulfanilic acid, and that reacts with the other reagent naphthylamine to form a red color.

Why is a confirmation test needed in the nitrate reduction test? ›

To avoid false-negative nitrite reduction reactions, negative nitrite reactions must be verified by the addition of zinc dust to the medium. Excess zinc dust has been reported to cause false-positive nitrite reduction reactions due to complete reduction of previously unreduced nitrate to ammonia.

What is the principle of dye reduction test? ›

The methylene blue reduction test is based on the fact that the color imparted to milk by the addition of a dye like methylene blue will disappear more or less quickly. The removal of the oxygen from milk and the formation of reducing substances during bacterial metabolism cause the color to disappear.

What is the principle of nitric oxide determination? ›

The assay principle is that NO and/or its oxidative derivatives react with a non-fluorescent compound forming a fluorescent product. Fluorescent compounds (frequently called probes or dyes) greatly vary in their specificity for NO and applicability in biological systems.

What is the principle of reductase test? ›

A heavy inoculum of test organism is incubated in a broth containing nitrate. The organisms capable of producing the nitrate reductase enzyme reduce the nitrate, present in the broth, to nitrite which may then be further reduced to nitric oxide, nitrous oxide, or nitrogen.

What does it mean when your urine test positive for nitrates? ›

So, if you have nitrites in your urine, it usually means that you have a urinary tract infection (UTI). UTIs are one of the most common types of infections, especially in women. Most UTIs affect the bladder and urethra (the tube that carries urine out of your body). Fortunately, most UTIs are not serious.

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