text.skipToContent text.skipToNavigation
No results found
Search Suggestions
31_stage_labacademy_howtoidentifyfungalcontaminationinyourcellculture_2880x960
Image source: Aliaksei Marozau/Shutterstock.com

How to identify fungal contamination in your cell culture

Lab Academy

Macroscopic detection

Fungi and mold can appear as small isolated colonies of grey, white or greenish color, floating at the surface of the medium. It is important to inspect the culture vessel with the naked eye and look for colonies which rest on the medium surface and will be missed during microscopic inspection. If the contamination is substantial, the medium will become turbid and cloudy, and spots on the vessel surface may appear. Sometimes fungal contaminations will cause a pH increase of the medium, resulting in phenol-red containing media to appear pink.

fungal_colonies_880x450_c08745fbcd
Fungal colonies floating on the medium surface.

Microscopic detection

It is usually the fungal spores which get into a culture vessel and then begin to sprout and form the typical fiber like hyphae. Fungi growing on the bottom of the dish/flask are more easily detected in the microscope than those floating on the surface.

header_fungal_contamination_1260x550