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Refers to the inability of a bacterium to resist decolorization with alcohol after being treated with Gram crystal violet. However, following decolorization, these bacteria can be readily counterstained with safranin, imparting a pink or red color to the bacterium when viewed by light microscopy. This reaction is usually an indication that the outer structure of the bacterium consists of a cytoplasmic (inner) membrane surrounded by a relatively thin peptidoglycan layer, which in turn, is surrounded by an outer membrane. See Gram stain.
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gram-neg·a·tive 'gram-'neg-ət-iv adj not holding the purple dye when stained by Gram's stain used chiefly of bacteria
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gram-neg·a·tive (gram-negґə-tiv) losing the stain or decolorized by alcohol in the Gram method of staining, a primary characteristic of bacteria having a cell wall composed of a thin layer of peptidoglycan covered by an outer membrane of lipoprotein and lipopolysaccharide. Cf. gram-positive.Medical dictionary. 2011.