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Getting started

  • What xPlant is for
  • First plant and explant workflow

Tissue culture concepts

  • Plants, explants, and stages
  • Media recipes and additives
  • Contamination tracking basics
  • Intro to tissue culture
  • Tissue culture basics

App workflows

  • Record a transfer
  • Batch Tracker
  • Create and use SOPs
  • Comments and team context
  • Lab rooms

Protocols

  • Protocols and SOPs — what's the difference?
  • Sterilization and aseptic technique
  • Media preparation protocol

Lab tools

  • QR labels and the in-app scanner

Developer tools

  • Developer SDK & API

Account and support

  • Privacy and data controls
  • AI features and smart suggestions

Tissue culture concepts

Contamination tracking basics

Contamination is the most common cause of culture loss in tissue culture work. xPlant lets you log every event — big or small — so you build a record that helps prevent the next one.

Why track it at all

Spot patterns before they spread

A single contamination event looks like bad luck. Five events in the same room in two weeks is a protocol or environment problem. Logged records make the pattern visible.

Measure the real cost of loss

When contamination is not recorded, its true frequency is unknown. Tracked losses let you justify equipment investment, SOP changes, or media reformulation.

Guide recovery decisions

A contamination log with outcome data — was the culture saved, discarded, or quarantined? — tells you what recovery strategies actually work for your lab.

How to log a contamination event

Contamination can be logged directly from a plant or explant detail page. Open the record, find the Contamination section, and click Add Log. You can also log contamination from a transfer if you notice it during a subculture session.

FieldWhat to record
TypeBacterial, fungal, viral, pest, unknown, or other
SeverityMild observation, moderate concern, or severe loss
Observed onDate and time the contamination was noticed
DescriptionWhat you saw: colour, location, spread pattern, smell
Follow-up actionWhat was done — discard, isolate, treat, photograph, monitor
OutcomeFinal result: culture saved, partially lost, fully discarded
ResolvedMark the event closed once the outcome is known

After you log it

Move the affected explant to Quarantine stage if you want to isolate it from active cultures while monitoring recovery. If the culture is unrecoverable, advance it to Discarded and add a final observation note before closing the contamination log.

Comments on the contaminated record are useful for team context — mention colleagues if the event affects shared equipment or if a follow-up action is needed.

Best practices

  • Log contamination the same day you observe it. Memory degrades fast and timestamps matter.
  • Record even minor observations. A 'suspicious spot' that clears up still tells you something about that vessel's history.
  • Use the description field freely — detail about colour, location, and spread is the hardest thing to reconstruct later.
  • Always mark the outcome when you discard or recover culture. An open log with no outcome skews your statistics.
  • Review contamination logs by room periodically. Clustering by location points to environment or equipment issues.

Related guides

Plants, explants, and stagesComments and team contextIntro to tissue cultureTissue culture basics