Preventing and Handling Black Dots in Cell Culture

News 14 10 月, 2025

When culturing cells, many researchers notice small black dots under the microscope and wonder — are they cell debris or contamination?

How to Identify the Cause

1. Observe movement:
Particles showing slow Brownian motion are usually harmless cell debris, while rapidly moving dots may indicate bacterial contamination.

2. Check the medium:
Contaminated media quickly turn yellow and cloudy due to bacterial growth (within 12–48 hours). Clear, reddish media usually indicate healthy cultures.

3. Test on a plate:
Inoculate suspected material on a microbial plate. Visible colonies = contamination. No colonies = debris.


Causes, Prevention, and Treatment

1. Cell Debris:
Caused by over-digestion (e.g., trypsinization too long) or rough pipetting.

  • Prevention: Be gentle; control enzyme digestion time.
  • Treatment: Wash with PBS, centrifuge gently, and re-seed in fresh media.

2. Bacterial Contamination:
Leads to cloudy medium and cell death.

  • Detection: Inoculate 1 mL of supernatant into LB broth; if it turns cloudy overnight, contamination confirmed.
  • Action: Discard contaminated cultures immediately.

3. Fungal Contamination:
Visible as filamentous hyphae or white floating particles.

  • Action: Discard affected cultures and disinfect incubator and workspace.

4. Mycoplasma Contamination:
Common but hard to detect; requires PCR or fluorescence methods.

  • Treatment: Repeated passaging and medium changes can help clear it in 2–3 weeks.

5. Apoptotic Bodies:
Formed when cells undergo apoptosis due to stress factors like pH shifts, toxins, or overcrowding.

  • Prevention: Avoid overgrowth; maintain optimal medium pH and low-endotoxin serum.

6. Serum Precipitates:
Calcium phosphate precipitates can appear as black dots but are harmless.

  • Tip: Avoid unnecessary heat inactivation of serum.

Tips to Prevent Contamination

Common contamination points:

  • Incomplete disinfection after thawing cells in a water bath.
  • Contaminated medium bottles or pipettes.
  • Touching sterile areas with gloves or sleeves.

Best sterile practices:

  1. Disinfect all surfaces with 75% ethanol before and after use.
  2. Keep workspace clean and uncluttered.
  3. Prepare all materials in advance to minimize movement.
  4. Regularly disinfect incubators and water baths.

Medium handling tips:

  • Always disinfect bottle surfaces.
  • Avoid leaving caps open too long.
  • Use fresh pipettes each time and never share reagents between cell lines.
  • Observe cultures daily for changes in clarity.

Summary

Cell culture contamination can come from many sources — bacteria, fungi, mycoplasma, or even handling errors. Maintaining strict aseptic technique, regular observation, and careful reagent management are key to keeping your cultures clean and healthy.