Adding Antibiotics and other Additives to Agar Media
Why add antibiotics?
Antibiotics are added to agar media to select for microorganisms carrying specific resistance genes, most commonly plasmids in bacterial cloning. Only cells that retain the plasmid (and its resistance marker) will survive and form colonies. This ensures:
- maintenance of plasmids after transformation
- elimination of non-transformed cells
- reduced background growth
- reliable downstream screening
Antibiotics are not sterilizing agents—they are selective pressures.
When are antibiotics added?
Antibiotics are heat-sensitive and must be added after autoclaving, once the molten agar has cooled to ~50–60 °C. Adding them too hot will degrade the antibiotic; too cool and the agar will begin to solidify unevenly. Stock solutions are typically prepared at 1000× concentration, filter-sterilized, aliquoted, and stored frozen.
Key practical notes
- Mix gently after adding antibiotics to avoid bubbles
- Pour plates promptly for even distribution
- Store plates at 4 °C, protected from light when applicable
- Always label plates with antibiotic and concentration
| Antibiotic | Stock Concentration (1000x) | Working Concentration |
|---|---|---|
| Ampicillin | 100 mg/mL | 100 µg/mL |
| Chloramphenicol | 25 mg/mL (dissolve in EtOH) |
25 µg/mL |
| Kanamycin | 50 mg/mL | 50 µg/mL |
Prerequisites
Procedure
How much to add: Because antibiotic stock is prepered at 1000x, you want to add 1 ml of stock for every 1 L of media.