yes sometimes it can but not always.
It is a pleomorphic Gram negative bacilli.
Gram-positive bacteria will retain the crystal violet stain and appear purple under a microscope after being stained. This is due to the thick peptidoglycan layer in their cell walls that retains the stain during the washing step of the Gram staining procedure.
Yes. Staphylococci are classified as gram positive bacteria and appear as purple spheres when Gram stained.
H neptunium, like other bacteria, was gram stained to determine its cell wall composition. This staining technique helps to differentiate between bacteria with a thick peptidoglycan layer (Gram-positive) and bacteria with a thinner layer surrounded by an outer membrane (Gram-negative). This information can provide insights into the structure and characteristics of the bacteria.
Gram positive bacteria appear purple or blue when stained with the Gram stain, while gram negative bacteria appear pink or red. This color difference is due to the thickness of the cell wall and the presence of an outer membrane in gram negative bacteria.
HPV is a virus. Viruses aren't gram stained.
Measles virus is a negative-sense, single-stranded RNA virus and does not have a cell wall structure that can be stained with the Gram stain. Instead, measles virus particles can be visualized using specialized staining techniques such as immunofluorescence or electron microscopy.
gram or wright stained smear, immunofluorescent stain and fatty acid, gaschromatography, cultures
Candida is a fungi and cannot be gram stained. Only bacterias can be gram stained as either positive or negative.
The clinical specimens that are gram stained are microorganism, bodily fluids and sputum specimen. Gram staining makes it easier for the identification of organisms.
Because all morphological forms are gram-negative. A.C.
Protists are often stained using a silver stain, not a Gram stain.
neither...it is a virus, and gram-staining, a microbiology tool, is not used to help identify or classify a virus
It is a pleomorphic Gram negative bacilli.
Because it is a Gram-negative bacterium and can be stained with Gram-negative stain.
Gram-positive bacteria will retain the crystal violet stain and appear purple under a microscope after being stained. This is due to the thick peptidoglycan layer in their cell walls that retains the stain during the washing step of the Gram staining procedure.
If you are talking about a Gram Stain, then red. E. coli is Gram negative which means that Safranin will stain it red during a gram stain.