
Curd microorganisms in gram stain are bacteria, Lactobacillus, and fungus, yeast cells as shown above picture. Curd is a dairy product and it is obtained by coagulating milk in a process called curdling. The coagulation can be achieved artificially by adding rennet or any edible acidic substance such as lemon juice or vinegar. The increased acidity causes the milk proteins (casein) to tangle into solid masses or curds. Whereas, raw milk alone or pasteurized milk which is then added with lactic acid bacteria will also naturally produce curds, and sour milk cheeses are produced this way.
Preparation of curd requires bacteria are-
The main ingredient in curd is casein. It is the reserve protein of milk that gives the product its white main color. The primary biological value of the curd is in its high protein content i.e. usually 10-12% which varies a little by curd variety.
Gram stain is a differential stain and therefore it uses to differentiate Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and is useful for fungi. Yeast cells are Gram-positive. It was devised originally by a Danish bacteriologist, Hans Christian Joachim Gram (1884) as a method of staining bacteria in his laboratory.
The reaction is dependent on the permeability of the bacterial cell wall and cytoplasmic membrane, to the dye–iodine complex. In Gram-positive bacteria, the crystal violet dye iodine complex combines to form a larger molecule which precipitates within the cell. The alcohol /acetone mixture which acts as a decolorizing agent causes dehydration of the multi-layered peptidoglycan of the cell wall. This causes a decrease in the space between the molecules causing the cell wall to trap the crystal violet iodine complex within the cell. Hence the Gram-positive bacteria do not get decolorized and retain primary dye appearing violet.
Also, Gram-positive bacteria have more acidic protoplasm and hence bind to the basic dye more firmly. In the case of Gram-negative bacteria, the alcohol, being a lipid solvent, dissolves the outer lipopolysaccharide membrane of the cell wall and also damages the cytoplasmic membrane to which the peptidoglycan attaches. As a result, the dye-iodine complex does not retain within the cell and permeates out of it during the process of decolonization. Hence, when a counterstain uses, they take up the color of the stain and appear pink.
a) Compound light microscope
b) Reagents and glasswares
c) Quality control strains
Positive Control (PC) : Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 25923)
Negative Control (NC): Escherichia coli (ATCC 25922)
d) Specimen ( curd)
Positive Control: violet color, round in shape in single, pairs and cluster
Test: Purple color, rod, and oval-shaped organisms
Negative Control: red in color and rod in shape
Gram-positive: purple or violet color
Gram-negative: Pink or red in color
Cocci: round in shape
Bacilli: rod in shape
Positive Control(PC): Gram-positive cocci in single, pairs and cluster
Test: Gram-positive bacilli ( ? Lactobacillus ) and Yeast cells ( fungi)
Negative Control(NC): Gram-negative bacilli as shown above image.