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Microbiologic Examination Direct Examination Direct examination of specimens frequently provides the most rapid indication of microbial infection. A variety of microscopic, immunologic, and hybridization techniques have been developed for rapid diagnosis Staining Staining is a technique used in microscopic techniques used to enhance the clarity of the microscopic image. Stains and dyes are widely used in the scientific field to highlight the structure of the biological specimens, cells, tissues etc. Gram stain The most widely used staining procedure in microbiology is the Gram stain, discovered by the Danish scientist and physician Hans Christian Joachim Gram in 1884. Gram staining is a differential staining technique that differentiates bacteria into two groups: Gram-positives and gram-negatives. The procedure is based on the ability of microorganisms to retain color of the stains used during the gram stain reaction. Gram-negative bacteria are decolorized by the alcohol, losing the color of the primary stain, purple. Gram-positive bacteria are not decolorized by alcohol and will remain as purple. After decolorization step, a counterstain is used to impart a pink color to the decolorized gram-negative organisms. Gram staining Objectives: To differentiate between the two major categories of bacteria: Gram positive and Gram negative. To understand how the Gram stain reaction affects Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria based on the biochemical and structural differences of their cell walls. Gram staining cont…… Gram positive bacteria: Stain dark purple due to retaining the primary dye called Crystal Violet in the cell wall. Example: Staphylococcus aureus Gram negative bacteria: Stain red or pink due to retaining the staining dye called Safranin. Example: Escherichia coli Gram Stain Mechanism Gram Positive Cell Wall: Gram-positive bacteria have a thick mesh-like cell wall which is made up of peptidoglycan (50-90% of cell wall), which stains purple. Peptidoglycan is mainly a polysaccharide composed of two subunits called Nacetyl glucosamine and N-acetyl muramic acid. As adjacent layers of peptidoglycan are formed, they are cross linked by short chains of peptides by means of a transpeptidase enzyme, resulting in the shape and rigidity of the cell wall. The thick peptidoglycan layer of Gram-positive organisms allows these organisms to retain the crystal violet-iodine complex and stains the cells as purple. Gram Stain Mechanism Gram Negative Cell Wall: Gram-negative bacteria have a thinner layer of peptidoglycan (10% of the cell wall) and lose the crystal violet-iodine complex during decolorization with the alcohol rinse, but retain the counter stain Safranin, thus appearing reddish or pink. The four basic steps of the Gram Stain 1) Application of the primary stain Crystal Violet (CV) to a heat-fixed smear of bacterial culture. CV dissociates in aqueous solutions into CV+ and Cl – ions. These two ions then penetrate through the cell wall and cell membrane of both Gram-positive and Gram-negative cells. The CV+ ions later interacts with negatively charged bacterial components and stains the bacterial cells purple. The four basic steps of the Gram Stain cont…. 2) Addition of Gram’s Iodine. Iodine acts as a mordant and as a trapping agent. A mordant is a substance that increases the affinity of the cell wall for a stain by binding to the primary stain, thus forming an insoluble complex which gets trapped in the cell wall. In the Gram stain reaction, the crystal violet and iodine form an insoluble complex (CV-I) which serves to turn the smear a dark purple color. At this stage, all cells will turn purple. The four basic steps of the Gram Stain cont…. 3) Decolorization with 95% ethyl alcohol.(Gram negative bacteria) Alcohol or acetone dissolves the lipid outer membrane of Gram negative bacteria, thus leaving the peptidoglycan layer exposed and increases the porosity of the cell wall. The CV-I complex is then washed away from the thin peptidoglycan layer, leaving Gram negative bacteria colorless. The four basic steps of the Gram Stain cont …… 3) Decolorization with 95% ethyl alcohol .(Gram positive bacteria ) On the other hand, alcohol has a dehydrating effect on the cell walls of Gram positive bacteria which causes the pores of the cell wall to shrink. The CV-I complex gets tightly bound into the multi-layered, highly cross-linked Gram positive cell wall thus staining the cells purple. The decolorization step must be performed carefully, otherwise over- decolorization may occur. This step is critical and must be timed correctly otherwise the crystal violet stain will be removed from the Grampositive cells. If the decolorizing agent is applied on the cell for too long time , the Gram-positive organisms to appear Gram-negative. Under-decolorization occurs when the alcohol is not left on long enough to wash out the CV-I complex from the Gram-negative cells, resulting in Gram-negative bacteria to appear Gram-positive. Decolorizing agents Various formulations of decolorizing agents may be used (acetone, acetone/ethanol, ethanol). Acetone is the most rapid decolorizer Ethanol is recommended for student use to prevent over-decolorization of samples The four basic steps of the Gram Stain cont…… 4) Counterstain with Safranin The decolorized Gram negative cells can be visible with a suitable counterstain, which is usually positively charged safranin, which stains them pink. Pink colour which adheres to the Gram positive bacteria is masked by the purple of the crystal violet Gram Stain PROTOCOL 1. air-dried, heat-fixed smear of cells 2. Flood slide with for 1 minute with crystal violet staining reagent. Please note that the quality of the smear (too heavy or too light cell concentration) will affect the Gram Stain results. 3. 4. Wash slide in a gentle and indirect stream of tap water for 2 seconds. Flood slide with the mordant: Gram's iodine. Wait 1 minute. 5. Wash slide in a gentle and indirect stream of tap water for 2 seconds. 6. Flood slide with decolorizing agent (ETHANOL). Wait 15 seconds or add drop by drop to slide until decolorizing agent running from the slide runs clear . 7. Flood slide with counterstain, safranin. Wait 30 seconds to 1 minute. 8. Wash slide in a gentile and indirect stream of tap water until no color appears in the effluent and then blot dry with absorbent paper. Observations Gram-stained bacteria should be viewed with a brightfield microscope at 1000X magnification with oil immersion. If the smear of cells is crowded it will be difficult to note cell shape and arrangement. Techniques For microscopic examination it is sufficient to have a compound microscope equipped with Low-power (1OX), High-power (40X), and Oil immersion (1OO0X) objectives, A mechanical stage, A substage condenser, and A good light source. For nucleic acid study For immunological studies achromatic Techniques cont….. Genetic probes are based on the detection of unique nucleotide sequences with the DNA or RNA of a microorganism. Once such a unique nucleotide sequence, which may represent a portion of a virulence gene or of chromosomal DNA, is found, it is isolated and inserted into a cloning vector (plasmid), which is then transformed into Escherichia coli to produce multiple copies of the probe. The sequence is then reisolated from plasmids and labeled with an isotope or substrate for diagnostic use. Techniques cont….. molecular technology in the diagnoses of infectious diseases has been further The use of enhanced by the introduction of gene amplification techniques, such as the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in which DNA polymerase is able to copy a strand of DNA by elongating complementary strands of DNA that have been initiated from a pair of closely spaced oligonucleotide primers. major applications in the detection of infections due to microorganisms This approach has had that are difficult to culture (e.g. the human immunodeficiency virus) or that have not as yet been successfully cultured Culture In many instances, the cause of an infection is confirmed by isolating and culturing microorganism either in artificial media or in a living host. Bacteria (including mycobacteria and mycoplasmas) and fungi are cultured in either liquid (broth) or on solid (agar) artificial media. Liquid media provide greater sensitivity for the isolation of small numbers of microorganisms Identification cultures of mixed growing in liquid media requires subculture onto solid media so that isolated colonies can be processed separately for identification. Growth in liquid media also cannot ordinarily be quantitated. Solid media, provide isolated colonies that can be quantified if necessary and identified. Some genera and species can be recognized on the basis of their colony morphologies. Identification of mixed cultures Cont…… In some instances one can take advantage of differential fermentation carbohydrate capabilities of microorganisms by incorporating one or more carbohydrates in the medium along with a suitable pH indicator. Such media are called differential media (e.g., eosin methylene blue or MacConkey agar) and are commonly used to isolate enteric bacilli. Different genera of the Enterobacteriaceae can then be presumptively identified by the color as well as the morphology of colonies. Identification of mixed cultures cont….. Culture media can also be made selective by incorporating compounds such as antimicrobial agents that inhibit the indigenous flora while permitting growth of specific microorganisms resistant to these inhibitors. One such example is Thayer-Martin medium, which is used to isolate Neisseria gonorrhoeae and N meningitidis. This medium contains : vancomycin to inhibit Gram-positive bacteria, colistin to inhibit most Gram-negative bacilli, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole to inhibit Proteus species and other species that are not inhibited by colistin anisomycin to inhibit fungi. The pathogenic Neisseria species, N gonorrhoeae and N meningitidis, are ordinarily resistant to the concentrations of these antimicrobial agents in the medium. The number of bacteria in specimens may be used to define the presence of infection Chlamydiae and viruses are cultured in cell culture systems virus isolation occasionally requires inoculation into animals, such as suckling mice, rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters, or primates. Some viruses, viruses, such as the hepatitis cannot be isolated in cell culture systems, so that diagnosis of hepatitis virus infection is based on the detection of hepatitis virus antigens or antibodies. Cultures are generally incubated at 35 to 37°C in an atmosphere consisting of air, air supplemented with carbon dioxide (3 to 10 percent), reduced oxygen (micro aerophilic conditions), or no oxygen (anaerobic conditions), depending upon requirements of the microorganism. clinical specimens from bacterial infections often contain: aerobic, facultative anaerobic, and anaerobic bacteria, such specimens are usually inoculated into a variety of general purpose, differential, and selective media, which are then incubated under aerobic and anaerobic conditions General procedure for collecting and processing specimens for aerobic and/or anaerobic bacterial culture. Medical Microbiology. 4th edition. Baron S, editor.