Fungi are eukaryotic organisms with both macroscopic and microscopic characteristics. Lactophenol Cotton Blue (LPCB) Staining is a simple histological staining method used for the microscopic examination and identification of fungi. The fungal spore cell wall is made up of chitin, which, the components of the Lactophenol Cotton Blue solution stains for identification. The lactophenol cotton blue solution acts as a mounting solution as well as a staining agent. The solution is blue in color and it is made up of a combination of three main reagents:
·
Phenol: It acts as a disinfectant by killing living organisms
·
Lactic acid: It preserves the fungal structures
·
Cotton blue: It stains the chitin on the fungal cell wall and other fungal
structures
The
stain will give a blue-colored appearance to the fungal spores and structures,
such as hyphae.
Reagents of Lactophenol Cotton Blue (LPCB) Staining
A preparation of 50ml Lactophenol cotton Blue
staining solution is made up of:
·
Distilled water 50ml
·
Cotton Blue (Aniline
Blue) 0.125g
·
Phenol Crystals (C6H5O4) 50g
·
Glycerol 100ml
·
Lactic acid (CH3CHOH COOH) 50ml
·
70% ethanol
Preparation of Lactophenol Cotton Blue solution
Lactophenol Cotton Blue solution is prepared for
over two days leaving the reagents undisturbed to allow dissolving and
maturation.
1.
Day 1: Dissolve the
cotton blue in distilled water and leave to rest overnight.
2.
Day2: Using protective
gloves, add phenol crystals to lactic acid in a glass beaker and stir using a
magnetic stirrer until the crystals dissolve.
3.
Add glycerol
4.
Filter the Cotton blue
and the distilled water into the phenol + glycerol +lactic acid solution and
mix.
5.
Store at room
temperature.
Procedure of Lactophenol Cotton Blue (LPCB) Staining
1.
On a clean microscopic
glass slide, add a drop of Lactophenol Cotton Blue Solution
2.
Add the fungal specimen
to the drop of alcohol using a sterile mounter such as an inoculation needle.
3.
Tease the fungal sample
using needle, to ensure the sample mixes well with the alcohol.
4.
Carefully cover the
stain with a clean sterile coverslip without making air bubbles to the stain.
5.
Examine the stain
microscopically at 40X, to observe for fungal spores and other fungal
structures.
Results and Interpretation
Fungal spores, hyphae,
and fruiting structures stain blue while the background stains pale blue.
Limitations
·
It can only be used as a
presumptive identification method of fungi which should be followed up with
other diagnostic tools such as biochemical and cultural examination.
·
The components of the
solution should be used before expiry, including the use of the solution before
it expires.
·
The solution may disrupt
the original morphology of the fungi.
·
The stain can only be
used to identify mature fungi and its structures and not the young vegetative
forms of fungi.
·
The stain can not be
stored for a long period of time.
Applications
Clinical diagnosis:
·
Identifying
fungal infections in various body sites like skin, lungs, blood, and
cerebrospinal fluid.
·
Differentiating
between different types of fungi based on their staining characteristics.
·
Monitoring
the effectiveness of antifungal treatments.
Research applications:
·
Studying
fungal cell wall composition and structure
·
Investigating
fungal interactions with host tissues
·
Analyzing
fungal diversity in environmental samples
·
Evaluating
antifungal efficacy in vitro
Common fungal stains and their characteristics:
·
Periodic Acid-Schiff
(PAS):
Used
for detection of fungi in tissue sections. Stains fungal cell walls pink,
making it useful for identifying both yeast and hyphae. Oxidation
of fungal polysaccharides results in the production of aldehydes that
react with Schiff reagent and fungal cell walls appear pink/magenta in
colour.
Procedure
- Tissue sections are treated
with periodic acid.
- Stain with Schiff reagent.
- Observe under bright-field
microscope.
Results:
- Fungal structures appear
magenta/red; tissue background lightly stained.
Applications:
- Detection of fungi in tissue
sections (biopsy specimens).
- Identification of pathogenic
fungi in histopathology.
- Examples: Candida albicans,
Histoplasma capsulatum.
Candia hyphae overlying a plaque of squamous cells- Fungal
esophagitis- PAS stain
Calcofluor White:
- A fluorescent stain that binds to
chitin and
cellulose in fungal cell walls, allowing for rapid visualization with a
fluorescence microscope. Fungi
fluoresce bright blue-white under UV light.
Procedure
- Place fungal material on a
slide.
- Add a drop of Calcofluor
White.
- Observe under fluorescence
microscope.
Results:
- Fungal structures glow bright
blue/white; background remains dark.
Applications:
- Rapid detection of fungi in
clinical specimens (e.g., skin scrapings, sputum).
- Study of spores, hyphae, and
yeast forms.
- Examples: Candida, Trichophyton.
Calcofluor white stained Candida albicans
showing true hyphae (*) and pseudohyphae (+).
Gomori's Methenamine Silver (GMS):
Gomori's Methenamine Silver (GMS), is a histological stain that highlights polysaccharides in tissue, primarily used to detect fungi by staining them black. It oxidises carbohydrates in fungal cell walls to aldehydes, which then reduce silver ions to visible black metallic silver, and is good for diagnosing fungal infections like Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) and identifying opportunistic pathogens. GMS is considered highly sensitive for detecting fungi in tissue samples.
Fungal
staining methods with specific applications
|
Staining
Method |
Principle |
Procedure
(Brief) |
Appearance
/ Results |
Specific
Applications / Examples |
|
1.
Lactophenol Cotton Blue (LPCB) Staining |
Cotton
Blue binds to chitin in fungal cell walls; phenol kills fungus, lactic
acid preserves structure. |
Mix
fungal material with LCB, cover with coverslip, observe under bright-field
microscope. |
Hyphae,
conidia, and spores appear blue; background pale. |
-
Identification of fungi in culture (e.g., Aspergillus, Penicillium).
|
|
2.
Calcofluor White Staining |
Fluorescent
dye binds to chitin and cellulose in fungal walls; fluoresces under UV
light. |
Mix
fungal material with Calcofluor White, observe under fluorescence microscope. |
Fungal
structures bright blue/white; dark background. |
- Rapid
detection of fungi in clinical samples (e.g., skin scrapings, sputum). |
|
3.
Periodic Acid-Schiff (PAS) Staining |
Periodic
acid oxidizes polysaccharides to aldehydes, which react with Schiff reagent;
fungal cell walls stain magenta. |
Treat
tissue section with periodic acid (Schiff reagent). Observe under
bright-field microscope. |
Fungal
structures appear magenta/red; tissue lightly stained. |
-
Detection of fungi in tissue sections or biopsies (e.g., Candida albicans,
Histoplasma capsulatum). |
In
short
- LPCB → culture/fungi morphology
- Calcofluor White → rapid clinical detection,
fluorescence
- PAS → tissue biopsy, invasive
fungal infections
No comments:
Post a Comment