MCB 3020 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Gram Staining, Fluorescence Microscope, Lyme Disease

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Alkali dyes (basic) are positively charged so they stick to the cells. Acidic dyes attach usually to background of slide due to negative charge- sometimes bind to positively charged cell structures. Gram staining- divide cells into gram positive and gram negative. Then add mordant to make cv stick better (use iodine) Decolorize to differentiate- add alcohol- some cells are colorless, others stay purple. Add counterstain (colors those who lost their color) Gram positive cells remain purple and don"t lose color- gram negative lose their color and end up pink/red. If serious infection, gram stains are ordered immediately to know which group of organisms you have. Broad spectrum antibiotics kill most but some antibiotics are specific to gram negative bacteria. Stains give you gram reaction, morphology and arrangement of cells. E. g. staph and strep present as g+ coxxi- staph presents in clusters, strep usually in chain.

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