Transcript Gram Stain
Bell Ringer
Why is C. diff a difficult microbe to treat in an
infected hospital patient?
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Objectives
Students will describe and perform the Gram stain
technique on two different species of bacteria.
Why is this important?
It is always the first step done in order to identify an
unknown pathogen
Graded on
Gram stain results
Morphology
Arrangement
Relative Size
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Differential Stains
Used to distinguish between bacteria
Gram stain
Gram positive = purple
Gram negative = pink
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Differential Stain
3 steps to a differential stain
1) Primary stain
Colorize cells
2)Decolorizing agent
Has the ability to remove the primary stain
3) Counterstain
Contrasting color to the primary stain
If the primary stain was removed, the cell absorbs the
counterstain
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Gram Stain
Based on differences in the bacterial cell walls
Both gram-positive and gram-negative have
peptidoglycan
Repeating disaccharides attached by polypeptides
Surrounds and protects cell
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Gram-Positive vs. Gram-Negative Cells
Gram-positive
Many layers of peptidoglycan
Teichoic acid spanning the peptidoglycan layer
Gram-negative
One or a few layers of peptidoglycan
Outer membrane consists of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Resists enzymes, detergents, and heavy metals,
antibiotics
Harder to kill
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Gram Stain
Utilizes four reagents
1) Primary stain – Crystal Violet (purple)
Stains all of the cells purple
2) Mordant – Gram’s Iodine
Increases cells affinity for primary stain
Binds primary stain and forms (CV-I) complex
Intensify color of stain
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Gram Stain
3) Decolorizing agent – Acid alcohol (Ethanol)
Acts to dehydrate proteins and dissolve lipids
Gram-negative cells - alcohol dissolves outer lipid layer
CV-I complex becomes easy to remove from thin
peptidoglycan layer
Cells become colorless and unstained
Thicker peptidoglycan layer in gram-positive cells traps
CV-I complex
Alcohol dehydrates pore causing thick peptidoglycan
layer to trap stain
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Gram Stain
4) Counterstain – Safranin (pink)
Decolorized, gram-negative, cells stain pink
Gram-positive cells retain purple stain
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Gram Stain
Color of
Gram-positive cells
Color of
Gram-negative cells
Primary stain:
Crystal violet
Purple
Purple
Mordant:
Iodine
Purple
Purple
Decolorizing agent:
Alcohol-acetone
Purple
Clear
Counterstain:
Safranin
Purple
Pink
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Common Errors
Old culture
Do not want to exceed 24 hours
G+ appear pink or mixed
Thick smear
Thick smears trap the primary stain
Cannot decolorize properly
Over-decolorize
Most important step
Alcohol can remove the primary stain from G+ cells
G+ appear pink
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While You Are Waiting
1) Complete the questions in the lab report
2) P. 68 in textbook
Describe acid-fast, endospore, flagella, and negative
staining procedures
Include
Explain what the stain is used for
Describe what a positive and negative cell look like
Explain the various stains used in the procedure
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