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Hiss Staining for Demonstration of Bacterial Capsules: Introduction, Requirements, Procedure, Result Interpretation and Significance

Hiss Staining for Demonstration of Bacterial Capsules:Introduction, Requirements, Procedure, Result Interpretation and Significance

Hiss Staining for Demonstration of Bacterial Capsules:Introduction, Requirements, Procedure, Result Interpretation and Significance

Introduction of  Hiss Staining Technique for Demonstration of Bacterial Capsules

The  Hiss Staining Technique is a type of positive staining method that stains the capsule and the bacterial cell with a brighter background. For the reason that a capsule appears as a light violet color between a dark violet-colored bacterial cell and colorless background.

Principle of Hiss Staining 

The capsule is non-ionic in nature and thus it becomes a failure to get a stain by an acidic stain but the application of basic stain stains the cell as well as the capsule. Copper sulfate is a hypertonic solution that creates an ionic difference causing diffusion of the stain towards the outer surface of the cell. After drying the smear, the stain which is not passed from the capsular layer during diffusion retains in the capsular layer i.e. a dark violet color cell and light violet color capsule.

Requirements for Hiss Staining

Equipment and reagents required are-

Procedure of Hiss Staining

  1. Mix the bacterial suspension with one drop of normal saline.
  2.  Prepare dry smear by using alcohol with the help of inoculating loop.
  3.  Cover the smear with a crystal violet stain and heat gently until steam begins to rise. Leave to stain for one minute.
  4. Wash off the stain with copper sulfate solution.
  5.  Leave the smear for drying.
  6. Examine the smear under the oil immersion objective using cedarwood oil.

Result Interpretation of Hiss Staining

Significance of  Hiss Staining

  1. It helps to differentiate the bacteria whether capsulated or non-capsulated.
  2. A capsule of bacteria acts as a virulence factor and gives pathogenicity to the bacterial cells.
  3. Encapsulated bacteria are as follows-

Keynotes

 

  1. Capsule assists bacteria to resist phagocytosis.
  2. It saves the organism from desiccation.
  3. It acts as a food reserve when certain organic compounds are in excess.
  4. A virulence determinant of pathogenic microbes. e.g. S. pneumoniae.
  5. The capsule also helps the organism by preventing complement-mediated bacterial cell lysis.
  6. It protects anaerobic bacteria from oxygen toxicity.
  7. It also excludes bacterial viruses and most hydrophobic toxic materials such as detergents.
  8. It aids bacterial attachment to surfaces of solid objects in aquatic environments or to tissue surfaces in hosts

 

Further Readings

  1. http://homeinsurancequotations.com/post/bacterial-cell-diagram-and functions.html
  2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK310485/#annex1.s68
  3. http://textbookofbacteriology.net/Anthrax_3.html
  4. Willis LM, Whitfield C. Structure, biosynthesis, and function of bacterial capsular polysaccharides synthesized by ABC transporter-dependent pathways. Carbohydrate research. 2013 Aug 30; 378:35-44.
  5. Microbiology; 5th Edition; Lansing M. Prescott; October 2002.
  6. Rautemaa R, Meri S. Complement-resistance mechanisms of bacteria. Microbes and infection. 1999 Aug 31;1(10):785-94.