This polysaccharide-coated lipid bilayer creates a permeability barrier that prevents efficient uptake of the compound.
Addition of EDTA, which is known to strip the lipopolysaccharides and increase membrane permeability,[9] removes the phloxine B resistance and allows gram-negative bacteria to be killed as well.
Phloxine B can be used to stain dead cells of several yeasts, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe.
Dead yeast cells lose membrane integrity, so phloxine B can enter and stain the intracellular cytosolic compounds.
[10] The same principle can be applied at higher throughput by fluorescence-activated flow cytometry (FACS), where all phloxine B-stained cells in a sample are counted.