Thionine Explained

Thionine, also known as Lauth's violet, is the salt of a heterocyclic compound. It was firstly synthesised by Charles Lauth. A variety of salts are known including the chloride and acetate, called respectively thionine chloride and thionine acetate. The dye is structurally related to methylene blue, which also features a phenothiazine core.[1] The dye's name is frequently misspelled with omission of the e, and is not to be confused with the plant protein thionin. The -ine ending indicates that the compound is an amine.[2] [3]

Dye properties and use

Thionine is a strongly staining metachromatic dye, which is widely used for biological staining.[4] Thionine can also be used in place of Schiff reagent in quantitative Feulgen staining of DNA. It can also be used to mediate electron transfer in microbial fuel cells.[5] Thionine is a pH-dependent redox indicator with E0 = 0.06 at pH 7.0. Its reduced form, leuco-thionine, is colorless.

When both the amines are dimethylated, the product tetramethyl thionine is the famous methylene blue, and the intermediates are Azure C (Monomethyl thionine), Azure A (when one of the amines is dimethylated and the other remains a primary amine), and Azure B (Trimethyl thionine). When methylene blue is "polychromed" by ripening (oxidized in solution or metabolized by fungal contamination,[6] as originally noted in the thesis of Dr D L Romanowski in 1890s), it forms thionine and all the Azure intermediates.[7] [8]

Notes and References

  1. Gérard Taurand, "Phenothiazine and Derivatives" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2005.
  2. Kiernan JA . Classification and naming of dyes, stains and fluorochromes . Biotech Histochem . 76 . 5–6 . 261–78 . 2001 . 11871748 . 10.1080/bih.76.5-6.261.278. 32479873 .
  3. Webster's Third New International Dictionary. G & C Merriam Co. 1976, p.2377.
  4. Web site: Stainsfile — Thionin .
  5. Book: Handbook of Fuel Cells: Fundamentals, Technology, Applications, 4-Volume Set. 2003. Wiley. 978-0-471-49926-8. Eugenii Katz . Andrew N. Shipway . Itamar Willner . Itamar Willner . Wolf Vielstich. 5. 21.
  6. http://www.dako.com/08066_12may10_webchapter19.pdf Dako Education Guide - Special Stains and H & E ” second edition Chapter 19: On Chemical Reactions and Staining Mechanisms by John A. Kiernan, Subsection What is Giemsa’s stain and how does it color blood cells, bacteria and chromosomes? p172
  7. 2124692 . 19867116 . 9 . J Exp Med . 645–70 . Wilson TM . On the Chemistry and Staining Properties of Certain Derivatives of the Methylene Blue Group when Combined with Eosin . 1907 . 6 . 10.1084/jem.9.6.645.
  8. Marshall, PN (1978) Romanowsky-type stains in haematology. Histochemical Journal 10: 1-29.