Thionine


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. The dye's name is frequently misspelled, with omission of the e. The -ine ending indicates that the compound is an amine..

Dye properties and use

Thionine is a strongly staining metachromatic dye, which is widely used for biological staining. 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.. 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, Azure A, and Azure B. When methylene blue is "polychromed" by ripening, it forms thionine and all the Azure intermediates.