Acridine Orange
Acridine orange
Acridine orange is a fluorescent dye. The compound binds to genetic material and can differentiate between deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA ) and ribonucleic acid (RNA ).
A fluorescent dye such as acridine orange absorbs the energy of incoming light. The energy of the light passes into the dye molecules. This energy cannot be accommodated by the dye forever, and so is released. The released energy is at a different wavelength than was the incoming light, and so is detected as a different color.
Acridine orange absorbs the incoming radiation because of its ring structure. The excess energy effectively passes around the ring, being distributed between the various bonds that exist within the ring. However, the energy must be dissipated to preserve the stability of the dye structure.
The ring structure also confers a hydrophobic (waterhating) nature to the compound. When applied to a sample in solution, the acridine orange will tend to diffuse spontaneously into the membrane surrounding the microorganisms . Once in the interior of the cell, acridine orange can form a complex with DNA and with RNA. The chemistries of these complexes affect the wavelength of the emitted radiation. In the case of the acridine orange–DNA complex, the emitted radiation is green. In the case of the complex formed with RNA, the emitted light is orange. The different colors allow DNA to be distinguished from RNA.
Binding of acridine orange to the nucleic acid occurs in living and dead bacteria and other microorganisms. Thus, the dye is not a means of distinguishing living from dead microbes. Nor does acridine orange discriminate between one species of microbe versus a different species. However, acridine orange has proved very useful as a means of enumerating the total number of microbes in a sample. Knowledge of the total number of bacteria versus the number of living bacteria
can be very useful in, for example, evaluating the effect of an antibacterial agent on the survival of bacteria.
Acridine orange is utilized in the specialized type of light microscopic technique called fluorescence microscopy. In addition, fluorescence of DNA or RNA can allow cells in a sample to be differentiated using the technique of flow cytometry. This sort of information allows detailed analysis of the DNA replication cycle in microorganisms such as yeast .
See also Laboratory techniques in microbiology
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The evolution of imprinting: chromosomal mapping of orthologues of mammalian imprinted domains in monotreme and marsupial mammals.(Research article)
Magazine article from: BMC Evolutionary Biology; 9/6/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...years ago) but not in monotremes (platypus and echidna...between the divergence of monotremes (prototherians) from...The egg-laying monotreme is an important link...been elucidated in monotremes. Parallels have been...orthologues in the monotreme can provide a useful...
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Fed: Freak world-first monotreme find shocks scientists
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 2/11/2005; 473 words
; ...Fed: Freak world-first monotreme find shocks scientists By...trusleri. The specimen is a monotreme like the platypus and echidna...has aspects that suggests monotremes split away from other mammals...separately in the line leading to monotremes and the line leading to the...
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Ouch! Don't cuddle a puggle.(ANIMAL ANGLES)(monotremes or echidna)
Magazine article from: Odyssey; 1/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...spines (or quills), it's not a porcupine. This mammal is called a monotreme; it's a member of the Monotrema order, which also includes the platypus. Monotremes are unique in many ways. Although they are mammals, they lay eggs just...
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65 DAYS OF STATIC, One Time for All Time (Monotreme)
Newspaper article from: Winnipeg Free Press; 1/27/2007; 266 words
; POP ROCK 65 DAYS OF STATIC, One Time for All Time (Monotreme) One Time... marries the wide-eyed, post-rave optimism of Tortoise's Millions Now Living Now Die and the focused precision...
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A monotreme about town.
Magazine article from: Ecos; 4/1/1999; ; 523 words
; Given how difficult it is to spot platypus, one would think they spend most of their time lounging in and around their burrow. But a recent study by the Australian Platypus Conservancy has shown that platypus like to cruise around. Study leader, Dr Melody Serena, says a single animal can encompass
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65daysofstatic: The Destruction of Small Ideas (Monotreme) [pound]12.99 ; Album reviews
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 4/28/2007; ; 255 words
; This Scottish band sound like Mogwai might if you fed them after midnight: scuttling, frantic, urgent and ominous, with rapid-fire glitch electronica and panic-attack piano flurries adding to the usual post-rock arsenal. The devil is in the detail: if the surface sounds post-Mogwai, headphone
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Disruption and pseudoautosomal localization of the major histocompatibility complex in monotremes.(Research)
Magazine article from: Genome Biology (Online Edition); 8/29/2007; ; 700+ words
; Authors: Juliane C Dohm [1]; Enkhjargal Tsend-Ayush [2]; Richard Reinhardt [1]; Frank Grützner [2]; Heinz Himmelbauer (corresponding author) [1] Background The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is of central importance for adaptive and innate immunity in vertebrates [1]. Sequencing MHCs
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An egg-laying mammal's moment in the sun Basics
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 6/11/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...laying mammals called monotremes, the long-beaked...members of the two other monotreme genuses, the duck...Reproductively, monotremes are like a VCR-DVD...that it looks pink. Monotreme sex determination also...remain mysterious, monotremes have multiple sets...
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The multiple sex chromosomes of platypus and echidna are not completely identical and several share homology with the avian Z.(Research)
Magazine article from: Genome Biology (Online Edition); 11/16/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...Smith [1] Background Monotreme mammals are receiving...come as a surprise, as monotremes (mammalian Subclass...1]. Five extant monotreme species are recognized...particularly important for monotremes because of their exceptional...
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Platypuses might have evolved slower than earlier believed
News Wire article from: The Hindustan Times; 1/22/2008; 624 words
; ...under a group of species called monotremes. From examinations of Teinolophos...was a platypus or some general monotreme ancestor. So, Timothy Rowe of...evolution, according to Rowe, monotremes generally have slow metabolisms...
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Monotremes
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
Monotremes The order Monotremata (one-holed creatures...and short-beaked spiny anteaters or echidnas. Monotremes are found only in Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea. Monotremes are a derivative of an ancient mammal stock but...
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Monotreme
Book article from: Biology
Monotreme Monotremes are an ancient group of mammals in...The earliest fossil occurrence of monotremes is in the lower Cretaceous, approximately 110 million years ago. Monotremes retain some of the primitive characteristics...
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monotreme
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
monotreme , name for members of the...spiny anteater. Although monotremes possess the distinguishing...Like birds and reptiles, monotremes have a single opening...in other mammals. Adult monotremes are toothless. The males...
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monotremes
Book article from: A Dictionary of Earth Sciences
monotremes See MONOTREMATA .
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Monotremata
Book article from: A Dictionary of Zoology
...cloaca (the name ‘monotreme’ is derived from...larynx is developed, and monotremes make sounds. The tarsus...and in hot weather all monotremes shelter in burrows or caves. Monotremes are known only from Australia...
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