Yes, gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria can be present on the same slide during microscopy. When a mixed sample is stained using the Gram stain method, gram-positive bacteria will appear purple due to their thick peptidoglycan layer, while gram-negative bacteria will appear pink due to their thinner peptidoglycan layer and outer membrane. This allows for differentiation between the two types of bacteria in a single sample.
Gram positive
Archaebacteria are neither gram positive nor gram negative because they do not have peptidoglycan in their cell walls like bacteria. Instead, they have unique cell wall structures that make them distinct from both gram positive and gram negative bacteria.
Gram-positive cells are purple and the Gram-negative cells are red.
as gram negative have low content of phospholipids than positive detergents at low concentration effectively kill negative bacteria
No, TB (Mycobacterium tuberculosis) is a gram-positive bacteria.
i believe it is a gram bacteria which causes respiratory illness.
Gram positive
Gram-negative bacteria have a thinner peptidoglycan layer in their cell walls compared to gram-positive bacteria. Additionally, gram-negative bacteria have an outer membrane that contains lipopolysaccharides, which is absent in gram-positive bacteria.
Gram-positive bacteria and Gram-negative bacteria are different in their colouration when dyed and viewed with a light microscope. Gram-positive appear violet, and Gram-negative appear red. Gram-positive and Gram-negative classification, however, has nothing to do with size.
Name of gram positive and gram negative bacteria?
Tetracycline kills both gram positive and gram negative bacteria. The mode of action to which Tetracycline works to kill bacteria is that it inhibits protein synthesis which works against both gram positive and gram negative bacteria.
Archaebacteria are neither gram positive nor gram negative because they do not have peptidoglycan in their cell walls like bacteria. Instead, they have unique cell wall structures that make them distinct from both gram positive and gram negative bacteria.
Acid-fast bacteria are gram-positive.
Gram-positive cells are purple and the Gram-negative cells are red.
klebsiella enterobacter citrobacter salmonellaparab
gram +
Gram positive bacteria responds to the Gram stain; gram negative bacteria does not. The two bacteria do not respond to the same antibiotics. Right now the most dangerous bacteria is a gram negative bacteria. That could change.