Yes, it is. Using the Gram staining method, the wall can be seen.
Of course it is possible. Gram staining stains the cell wall
The cell wall
The bacterial cell wall has a negative charge. The basic stain has a positive charge. Since they have opposite charges, the bacterial cell wall and the basic stain are attracted to each other; hence the basic stain dyes the bacteria.
Those that you can see under the microscope are the cell wall, nucleus, nucleolus, and cytoplasm.
The cell wall of gram-negative bacteria is a thin layer sandwiched between an outer cell envelope and an inner cell membrane. The gram-positive cell wall is much thicker, has no cell envelope, and contains additional substances that retain the blue stain.
nucleus, cytoplasm and cell membrane, and cell wall
it is found in the cytoplasm of the cell. Which is a jelly like liquid substance.
cell wall
In a gram positive stain it is because the cell's cell wall is made up of peptioglycan
The seven parts of the bacterial cell are the Genetic material,the Ribosomes, the cell wall, the cell membrane, the cytoplasm, and the flagella.
The bacterial cell wall has a negative charge. The basic stain has a positive charge. Since they have opposite charges, the bacterial cell wall and the basic stain are attracted to each other; hence the basic stain dyes the bacteria.
While a bacterial cell does have a cell wall and a cell membrane, it does not contain a nucleus. The bacterial cell's genetic material, which looks like a thick, tangled string, is found in the cytoplasm.
while bacterial cell does have a cell wall and a cell membrane, it does not contain a nucleus. the bacteria cell's genetic material, which looks like a thick, tangled a tring, is found in the cytoplasm
The cell wall.. gram stain tests for presence of a thick outer layer of peptidoglycan.
An animal cell doesn't have a cell wall although it has a nucleus and cytoplasm
a cell wall or nueclues not sure
Because Nigrosin is an acidic dye--carries a negative charge--and repels against the negatively charged cell walls of most bacteria.
The whole cell doesn't stain during a cell wall stain because the dyes that are used are only attracted to the negative cell wall and only sticks it. The inside of the cell shows clear.
Those that you can see under the microscope are the cell wall, nucleus, nucleolus, and cytoplasm.