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Staining of a Gram-Negative Bacterium

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    (English captions by Andrea Matsumoto, University of Michigan.) This program will explain how the gram stain procedure is able to distinguish between gram-positive
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    and gram-negative bacteria by representing
    the staining events at the ultra-structural level.
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    This is one animation, from a series of two,
    that specifically shows the staining of gram-negative
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    bacteria with the critical structures of the
    bacterial surface represented schematically.
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    The circle at the lower right tracks how the
    bacteria would appear in the microscope if
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    they were examined during each step of the
    staining procedure.
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    Prior to staining the bacteria would be transparent
    and invisible.
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    After heat fixing the slide, it is first flooded
    with crystal violet for one minute and then
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    washed.
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    The stain colors the bacterial cell wall blue
    and the bacteria would appear blue in the
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    microscope if examined at this point in the
    procedure.
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    Next the slide is flooded with iodine solution
    for one minute and then washed again.
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    During this step the iodine and crystal violet
    combine to form a larger complex within the
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    layers of the cell wall.
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    Microscopically the bacteria appear dark blue
    or black after this step.
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    The slide is now rinsed with a decolorizing
    agent, an acetone alcohol solution.
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    Because of the relative simplicity of the
    gram-negative cell wall, the crystal violet-iodine
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    complexes can be washed away with this treatment
    and the organisms once again appear transparent
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    at this stage because the dark stain has been
    removed.
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    Finally the slide is counter-stained with
    neutral red or safranin for one minute and
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    then washed for the final time.
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    The red stain confers red color to the bacteria
    and this color dominates the microscopic appearance.
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    So by virtue of the simpler structure of the
    gram-negative cell wall these bacteria appear
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    red in the microscope after this staining
    procedure.
Title:
Staining of a Gram-Negative Bacterium
Description:

This short animation demonstrates a gram stain of gram-negative bacterium. This resource was developed by Cary Engleberg of the University of Michigan. It is part of a larger learning module about laboratory methods for clinical microbiology. The full learning module, editable animation, and video transcript are available at http://open.umich.edu/education/med/oernetwork/med/microbiology/clinical-microbio-lab/2009. Copyright 2009-2010, Cary Engleberg. This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:44
kludewig edited English subtitles for Staining of a Gram-Negative Bacterium
Amara Bot edited English subtitles for Staining of a Gram-Negative Bacterium
Amara Bot added a translation

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