Crystal Violet staining is a technique used in cell culture laboratories to determine concentration of cells in culture liquid.
As against other means of cell staining and counting (e.g. Trypan blue) the entities counted using the Crystal Violet staining are the cell nuclei instead of whole cells. This technique has the advantage that also concentrations of aggregated cells can be determined accurately.
Here comes the Citric acid in. Nuclei are situated within the cell. To extract the nuclei out of the cells Citric acid is used to make the cell burst so that the Crystal Violet can stain the nuleus and thus concentration of cells can be determined using a microscope and a counting chamber.
Yes it is.
The acetic acid helps in preservation of WBC and breakdown RBC and dye help in staining of the nucleus of WBC
No. Citric acid is an organic acid
As I know sugarcane does not contain citric acid but lemon contains citric acid.
Ascorbic Acid is C6H8O6 Citric Acid is C6H8O7
citric acid is a carboxylic acid. It could form crystals if recyrstallized from suitable solvents.
Crystal Light has citric acid in it, and this may contribute to your acid reflux.
Yes it is.
Both processes use 2 stains. The Gram staining process uses crystal violet as the primary stain and safranin as the secondary stain. Acid-fast staining uses carbol fuchsin as the primary and methylene blue as the secondary.
The acetic acid helps in preservation of WBC and breakdown RBC and dye help in staining of the nucleus of WBC
No. Citric acid is an organic acid
Citric acid is considered to be a weak acid.
Citric and acid ARE words, so the word form is citric acid!
The acid found in citrus fruits is called the citric acid and can provide a sour taste and helps fight of predators with its sting when it gets into your eyes so the acid in citrus fruit is citric :)
Citric acid is not malleable.
Citric acid (which is responsible for the sour taste) and ascorbic acid (which most of us know as vitamin C).
Lemon is not a citric acid but it chiefly contains citric acid!