bacterium that doesn't retain violent stain
No, acid-fast bacteria do not stain gram-negative when subjected to the gram stain.
Acid-fast bacteria are gram-positive.
Gram positive
There are 1000 milligrams in 1 gram, so 1 gram of omega-3 fatty acid is equivalent to 1000 milligrams of omega-3 fatty acid.
The gram formula mass of acetic acid (CH3COOH) is approximately 60.05 g/mol.
One gram atomic mass of calcium reacts with two gram molecular masses of hydrochloric acid to form one gram formula mass of calcium chloride and one gram molecular mass of diatomic hydrogen gas.
The color common to both the gram stain and the acid-fast stain is red/pink. In the gram stain, Gram-negative bacteria appear red or pink after staining with safranin, while in the acid-fast stain, acid-fast bacteria such as Mycobacterium species retain the red/pink color of carbol fuchsin despite decolorization with acid-alcohol.
If you used acid-alcohol as the decolorizing agent in spore staining the cells of the bacillus are gram plus. If you use acid alcohol it will not decolorize gram plus cell wall as only gram negative are decolorized. It will not get a differentiation in color.
Although mycoplasma lack a cell wall and therefore test gram negative, they are considered to be descendents of 'nonsporulating and endospore forming gram-positive bacteria' (Madigan et al., 2009), such as Lactobacilli, Bacilli and Streptococci, (Dandekar et al., 2002), which have lost their cell wall. Mycoplasmas are therfore classed as gram- positive bacteria. This is supported by ribosomal RNA and DNA analysis.
gram positive
2
amino acid = "1000 grams sugar 250 grms fatty acid 500 gram water 100grmasodium hydroxide?"