Abstract
The effect of heating bacteria in milk on the direct microscopic clump count was determined. The periodic acid-bisulfite-toluidine blue (PST) and the aniline oil-methylene blue (AOMB) stains were compared. The PST stain gave quantitative recovery in all cases, while the AOMB procedure did not stain Gram-negative rods that had been heated. Gram-negative rods were poorly stained by the PST method but could be counted. The proteose-peptone fraction of milk was primarily responsible for the loss of stainability. Mineral salts were less effective. Loss of stainability was associated with extraction from the bacterial cells of N and P containing materials, identified as nucleic acids. The superior result obtained with the PST stain is attributed to the fact that polysaccharides as well as nucleic acids are stained. Strains of bacteria which contain little polysaccharide stain poorly by this procedure after nucleic acids are removed.

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