Simple Staining: Principle, Procedure, Uses

The simple stain can be used as a quick and easy way to determine the cell shape, size, and arrangement of bacteria. True to its name, the simple stain is a very simple staining procedure involving a single stain solution. Any basic dye, such as methylene blue, safranin, or crystal violet, can be used to color the bacterial cells.

These stains will readily give up a hydroxide ion or accept a hydrogen ion, which leaves the stain positively charged.  Since most bacterial cells and cytoplasm surface is negatively charged, these positively charged stains adhere readily to the cell surface. After staining,  bacterial cell morphology (shape and arrangement) can be appreciated.

Procedure

Simple Staining Procedure (simple stain)
Simple Staining Procedure

Preparation of a smear

  1. Using a sterilized inoculating loop, transfer a loopful of liquid suspension containing bacteria to a slide (clean grease-free microscopic slide) or transfer an isolated colony from a culture plate to a slide with a water drop.
  2. Disperse the bacteria on the loop in the drop of water on the slide and spread the drop over an area the size of a dime. It should be a thin, even smear.
  3. Allow the smear to dry thoroughly.
  4. Heat-fix the smear cautiously by passing the underside of the slide through the burner flame two or three times. It fixes the cell in the slide. Do not overheat the slide as it will distort the bacterial cells.

Staining 

  1. Cover the smear with methylene blue and allow the dye to remain in the smear for approximately one minute (Staining time is not critical here; somewhere between 30 seconds to 2 minutes should give you an acceptable stain, the longer you leave the dye in it, the darker will be the stain).
  2. Using distilled water wash bottle, gently wash off the excess methylene blue from the slide by directing a gentle stream of water over the surface of the slide.
  3. Wash off any stain that got on the bottom of the slide as well.
  4. Saturate the smear again but this time with Iodine. Iodine will set the stain
  5. Wash any excess iodine with gently running tap water. Rinse thoroughly. (You may not get a mention of steps 4 and 5  in some textbooks)
  6. Wipe the back of the slide and blot the stained surface with bibulous paper or with a paper towel.
  7. Place the stained smear on the microscope stage smear side up and focus the smear using the 10X objective.
  8. Choose an area of the smear in which the cells are well spread in a monolayer. Center the area to be studied, apply immersion oil directly to the smear, and focus the smear under oil with the 100X objective.
Left: Cocci in Cluster  Right: Bacilli
Left: Cocci in Cluster; Right: Bacilli (Image source: microrao.com)

Results

The bacterial cells usually stain uniformly and the color of the cell depends on the type of dye used. If methylene blue is used, some granules in the interior of the cells of some bacteria may appear more deeply stained than the rest of the cell, which is due to the presence of different chemical substances.

Uses

Diagnostic microbiology laboratory generally does not perform simple staining methods. Differential stainings such as Gram staining and AFB staining are commonly used to identify and differentiate bacterial isolates. Simple staining can be useful in the following circumstances.

  1. To differentiate bacteria from yeast cells: When endocervical swab culture is done in blood agar both Staphylococcus spp and yeast cells may give similar-looking colonies in Blood agar (a common error for a new technologist or microbiologist with less experience). Performing the wet mount technique or simple staining from the isolate can be helpful.
  2. To presumptively identify the bacterial isolate
    Due to their ubiquitous presence, Bacillus spp may present as a contaminant in the culture plates. In some circumstances (e.g. growth in Blood agar but no growth in MacConkey agar), identifying the shape of the bacteria (rod or cocci) may help to eliminate the isolate as possible contaminants (e.g., Bacillus spp) or further process as a potential pathogen (cocci).

References

  1. Moyes, R. B., Reynolds, J., & Breakwell, D. P. (2009). Preliminary staining of bacteria: simple stains. Current protocols in microbiology, Appendix 3, . https://doi.org/10.1002/9780471729259.mca03es15 
  2. Tripathi, N., & Sapra, A. (2023). Gram Staining. In StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing. 
  3. Dagnall, G. J., & Wilsmore, A. J. (1990). A simple staining method for the identification of chlamydial elementary bodies in the fetal membranes of sheep affected by ovine enzootic abortion. Veterinary microbiology, 21(3), 233–239. https://doi.org/10.1016/0378-1135(90)90034-s

Acharya Tankeshwar

Hello, thank you for visiting my blog. I am Tankeshwar Acharya. Blogging is my passion. As an asst. professor, I am teaching microbiology and immunology to medical and nursing students at PAHS, Nepal. I have been working as a microbiologist at Patan hospital for more than 10 years.

14 thoughts on “Simple Staining: Principle, Procedure, Uses

  1. Pls. Sir I need more clarification on different methods of staining. I hope to hear from you

      1. Musa, we have already covered different types of staining, check here. If the staining method is missing there, let us know.

  2. 1. Why some dieses specimens are not preserved using the herbarium method?

    2. What alternative measure can be done if preservation of specimen is not possible?

  3. Your blog is really wonderful. Please, I need more information about identification of lower and higher fungi. Thanks

  4. I would like to thank you how nicely you prepared short concise and easily understandable procedures associated with microbiology. please send to me documents describing morphology medical mycology.

  5. does the iodine need to be in certain concentration? is it pure iodine or a mixture with something else?

  6. In the preparation of smear experimental report, pls what is the result /observation, I mean what would be written?

  7. which culture shows rods and which appeared coccus to you after bacteria smear and simple staining experiment

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