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Review Article

Ruthenium Red and the Bacterial Glycocaly

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Pages 194-212 | Published online: 12 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Ruthenium red, a promising cationic reagent for electron microscopy (EM), has long been an important tool in histology. The reagent was initially used by botanists as a semispecific stain for pectic substances, but it has gradually been embraced by investigators in microbiology and the animal sciences as a stain for anionic glycosylated polymeric substances. Luft developed a reliable method and demonstrated that ruthenium red was a useful reagent for visualizing ultrastructural detail. Many investigators, using modifications of Luft's approach, have identified numerous applications for this important reagent. Ruthenium red has been used to show the ultrastructural detail of bacterial glycocalyces. Strong, sharp and consistent observations of this ultrastructural component of the bacterial cell have given a better understanding its fibrous anionic matrix. Any variations in staining owing to artifactual alteration of the fine delicate ultrastructural features have been overcome by incorporation of diamine lysine into ruthenium red methods, thus providing flexible processing times under less than ideal laboratory sampling conditions. Ruthenium red has broad utility in the biological sciences, and in combination with lysine, it is an excellent EM stain for enhanced visualization of bacterial glycocalyx from culture or from clinical specimens.

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