Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.
Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.
Title: Bacterial Structure and Staining Methods
Description: This tells us about certain structures present in bacteria as well as certain stains used to see them under a microscope. One example is the Gram stain.
Description: This tells us about certain structures present in bacteria as well as certain stains used to see them under a microscope. One example is the Gram stain.
Document Preview
Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above
Module: BIOM - 1009
Lecturer: Dr Ioannou
Date: 04/10/16
Bacterial Structure and Staining Methods
o
Bacterial organisms can be identified by certain morphological features such as:
Shape
Spherical – Cocci
Such as: Streptococcus pneumoniae
Rod Shaped – Bacilli
Such as: Escherichia coli
Spiral Shaped – Spirochaetes
Such as: Treponema pallidum
Size
Motility
Structure
Spore/capsule formation
Toxin production
o
Bacteria can be stained using the ‘Gram Stain’
...
The Gram stain
technique is as follows:
Prepare the slide
Make sure it is free from oil or grease, and sterilise it with alcohol
Label the slide
Mark the area that the bacterial smear will be placed
Prepare the smear
Transfer a drop of the suspended culture on to a slide with an inoculation loop
Smear it over the slide in a very thin layer
Heat fix the slide
Allow the smear to air dry
Pass the hole slide through a Bunsen burner
Heat fixing kills the bacteria and firmly adheres the smear to the slide
Stain the slide
Gently flood smear with crystal violet
Wash off remaining stain
Gently flood smear with Gram’s iodine
Wash off remaining stain
Decolourise using 95% ethyl alcohol or acetone
Immediately rinse
Gently flood with safranin
Wash off remaining stain
Blot dry
View the slide under a light microscope
Gram positive cells are purple and gram negative cells will be
pink/red
See a gram stain to the right:
Below is a table of medically important bacteria sorted to either
gram positive or negative:
Medically Important Bacteria
Gram Positive
Gram Negative
Staphylococcus aureus
Bacillus spp
Clostridium spp
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Escherichia coli
Salmonella spp
o
The Gram stain works the way it does due to the differences in the structure of the bacterial cell wall
This cell wall is composed of sugars and amino acids – called peptidoglycan
Its role is to protect the cell from lysis and so give the cell shape
Peptidoglycan is a polymer of N-acetyl
glucosamine and N-acetyl muramic with side
chains of alternating D and L amino acids
These D amino acids are useful targets
for antibiotics
Peptidoglycan is highly crosslinked meaning it
will make the cell rigid
Gram positive cells contain large amount of another
polymer named teichoic acid
The right image is of a Gram positive cell wall
Gram negative cell walls contain a thin layer of
peptidoglycan; this is acting as a permeability barrier
The wall is also not highly cross-linked
Once the bacteria are stained with crystal violet
followed by iodine, an iodine-crystal violet complex is
formed – it is thought that the addition of alcohol to
decolourise results in pores of peptidoglycan to
shrink and therefore remain a purple colour
Gram negative cells also have lipopolysaccharides
on the outer membrane of the cell
The right image is of a gram negative cell
wall/membrane:
o
The Ziehl–Neelsen stain, also known as the acid-fast stain is another staining technique used to identify
acid-fast organisms such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis
These acid fast organisms have a waxy lipid in their cell walls,
therefore they do not stain readily with the Gram stain
The right image is an example of the Ziehl-Neelsen stain at
1000x magnification
o
The Auramine-Phenol stain is another stain used to identify acid-fast bacteria
Although it is not as specific as the Ziehl-Neelsen, is more affordable and so is used more often
as a screening tool
The microbes fluoresce under a light microscope with this stain
The image below shows the Auramine-Phenol stain at 40x magnification:
Title: Bacterial Structure and Staining Methods
Description: This tells us about certain structures present in bacteria as well as certain stains used to see them under a microscope. One example is the Gram stain.
Description: This tells us about certain structures present in bacteria as well as certain stains used to see them under a microscope. One example is the Gram stain.