Polymyxin B Sulfate
Polymyxin B Sulfate
Gibco™

Polymyxin B Sulfate

Polymyxin-B-Sulfat wird von Bacillus polymyxa erzeugt. Polymyxin B-Sulfat wirkt, indem es an die Zellmembran bindet und dadurch die Permeabilität derWeitere Informationen
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KatalognummerMenge
2185002925 MU
Katalognummer 21850029
Preis (EUR)
169,00
Each
Zum Warenkorb hinzufügen
Menge:
25 MU
Preis (EUR)
169,00
Each
Zum Warenkorb hinzufügen
Polymyxin-B-Sulfat wird von Bacillus polymyxa erzeugt. Polymyxin B-Sulfat wirkt, indem es an die Zellmembran bindet und dadurch die Permeabilität der Zellmembran beeinträchtigt. Gibco™ Polymyxin B-Sulfat wird zur Vermeidung bakterieller Kontamination von Zellkulturen eingesetzt. Dieses Antibiotikum ist gegen gramnegative Bakterien sehr aktiv. Die empfohlene Arbeitskonzentration beträgt 100 Einheiten/ml. Wir bieten eine Vielzahl von Antibiotika und Antimykotika für Zellkulturanwendungen an.

Verwendung des Produkts
Nur für Forschungszwecke: Nicht für diagnostische oder therapeutische Zwecke bei Tieren und Menschen geeignet.
Nur für Forschungszwecke. Nicht zur Verwendung bei diagnostischen Verfahren.
Specifications
Konzentration100 Einheiten/ml
Zur Verwendung mit (Anwendung)Auswahl der Bakterien
Menge25 MU
Haltbarkeit24 Monate
VersandbedingungRaumtemperatur
FormPulver
ProdukttypAntibiotikum
SterilitätUnsteril
Unit SizeEach
Inhalt und Lagerung
Lagerbedingungen: 15 bis 30 °C
Versandbedingungen: Haltbarkeit bei
Umgebungstemperatur: 24 Monate ab Herstellungsdatum

Häufig gestellte Fragen (FAQ)

How can I decontaminate my cultures?

When an irreplaceable culture becomes contaminated, researchers may attempt to eliminate or control the contamination.

1. Determine if the contamination is bacteria, fungus, mycoplasma, or yeast. Read more here to view characteristics of each contaminant.
2. Isolate the contaminated culture from other cell lines.
3. Clean incubators and laminar flow hoods with a laboratory disinfectant, and check HEPA filters.
4. Antibiotics and antimycotics at high concentrations can be toxic to some cell lines. Therefore, perform a dose-response test to determine the level at which an antibiotic or antimycotic becomes toxic. This is particularly important when using an antimycotic such as Gibco Fungizone reagent or an antibiotic such as tylosin.

The following is a suggested procedure for determining toxicity levels and decontaminating cultures:

1. Dissociate, count, and dilute the cells in antibiotic-free media. Dilute the cells to the concentration used for regular cell passage.
2. Dispense the cell suspension into a multiwell culture plate or several small flasks. Add the antibiotic of choice to each well in a range of concentrations. For example, we suggest the following concentrations for Gibco Fungizone reagent: 0.25, 0.50, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, and 8.0 µg/mL.
3. Observe the cells daily for signs of toxicity such as sloughing, appearance of vacuoles, decrease in confluency, and rounding.
4. When the toxic antibiotic level has been determined, culture the cells for two to three passages using the antibiotic at a concentration one- to two-fold lower than the toxic concentration.
5. Culture the cells for one passage in antibiotic-free media.
6. Repeat step 4.
7. Culture the cells in antibiotic-free medium for four to six passages to determine if the contamination has been eliminated.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Cell Culture Support Center.

What antibiotics do you offer to help control or eliminate cell culture contamination?

Please view the following page to browse the cell culture antibiotics we offer (https://www.thermofisher.com/us/en/home/life-science/cell-culture/mammalian-cell-culture/antibiotics.html).

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Cell Culture Support Center.

Zitierungen und Referenzen (2)

Zitierungen und Referenzen
Abstract
The tumour suppressor CDKN2A/p16
Authors:Wouters K, Deleye Y, Hannou SA, Vanhoutte J, Maréchal X, Coisne A, Tagzirt M, Derudas B, Bouchaert E, Duhem C, Vallez E, Schalkwijk CG, Pattou F, Montaigne D, Staels B, Paumelle R
Journal:Diab Vasc Dis Res
PubMed ID:28868898
The genomic CDKN2A/B locus, encoding p16
Progranulin in the hematopoietic compartment protects mice from atherosclerosis.
Authors:Nguyen AD, Nguyen TA, Singh RK, Eberlé D, Zhang J, Abate JP, Robles A, Koliwad S, Huang EJ, Maxfield FR, Walther TC, Farese RV
Journal:Atherosclerosis
PubMed ID:30212683
Progranulin is a circulating protein that modulates inflammation and is found in atherosclerotic lesions. Here we determined whether inflammatory cell-derived progranulin impacts atherosclerosis development.