Albumin, for biochemistry, from chicken egg, powder
Albumin, for biochemistry, from chicken egg, powder
Thermo Scientific Chemicals

Albumin, for biochemistry, from chicken egg, powder

Albumin, bovine serum (BSA), CAS # 9048-46-8, is a small, stable biomolecule derived from bovine blood with wide applications in biochemistry, immunochemistry, pharmacokinetics, and cell culture studies.
数量:
50 g
100 g
500 g
2.5 kg
製品番号(カタログ番号) 400450500
価格(JPY)
-
見積もりを依頼する
数量:
50 g
一括またはカスタム形式をリクエストする
化学物質識別子
CAS9006-59-1
MDL NumberMFCD00130424
Appearance (Color)White to yellow
Appearance (Form)Powder
Protein>=80 %
Water=<8.0 % (K.F.)
This Thermo Scientific Chemicals brand product was originally part of the Acros Organics product portfolio. Some documentation and label information may refer to the legacy brand. The original Acros Organics product / item code or SKU reference has not changed as a part of the brand transition to Thermo Scientific Chemicals.

General description
• Albumin, bovine serum (BSA) is available as a protease-free, lyophilized powder that may be stably stored at 2-8°c
• It is comprised of 583 amino acid residues, and has a molecular weight of 66.5 kDa

Applications
• BSA is used as a protein standard in quantification assays, such as the Bradford protein assay
• It is used to stabilize enzymes in restriction digestions in molecular biology experiments
• It is a blocking agent in immunoblots thus increasing signal to noise ratios by quenching non-specific immunochemical reactions
• BSA is a nutritive agent and used as a supplement in cell and microbial culture media

RUO – Research Use Only

General References:

  1. Farwell, A. P.; Dubord-Tomasetti, S. A. Thyroid hormone regulates the expression of laminin in the developing rat cerebellum. Endocrinology. 1999,140 (9), 4221–7.
  2. Kreader, C. A. Relief of amplification inhibition in PCR with bovine serum albumin or T4 gene 32 protein. Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 1996, 62 (3), 1102–6.
  3. Axelsson, I. Characterization of proteins and other macromolecules by agarose gel chromatography. Journal of Chromatography A. 1978, 152 (1), 21–32.