Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium
Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium
Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium
Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium
Gibco™

Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium

Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium은 CHO-S, CHO-K1, HEK 293, Jurkat, NIH 3T3 등 다양한 포유류 세포의 동결 보존을 위한 완전하고자세히 알아보기
Have Questions?
카탈로그 번호수량
1264801050 mL
카탈로그 번호 12648010
제품 가격(KRW)
274,000
온라인 행사
Ends: 31-Dec-2025
288,000
할인액 14,000 (5%)
Each
카트에 추가하기
수량:
50 mL
제품 가격(KRW)
274,000
온라인 행사
Ends: 31-Dec-2025
288,000
할인액 14,000 (5%)
Each
카트에 추가하기
Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium은 CHO-S, CHO-K1, HEK 293, Jurkat, NIH 3T3 등 다양한 포유류 세포의 동결 보존을 위한 완전하고 즉시 사용할 수 있는 동결 배지입니다. Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium의 주요 특징:

• 더 나은 성능을 위해 기존 제형을 최적화하였습니다.
• 다양한 포유류 세포에 적합합니다.
• 품질 및 성능이 테스트 되었습니다.

더 나은 성능을 위해 기존 제형 최적화
수년간 연구자들은 다음과 같은 동결 배지를 만드는 일반적인 방법을 사용해왔습니다: 10% 혈청과 10% DMSO가 첨가된 고농도 포도당 Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium(DMEM).  Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium은 Gibco™ Bovine Serum Fetal Bovine Serum을 사용하며, 해동 후 세포 회복과 생존도를 개선하기 위해 기존 제형을 최적화한 버전입니다.

다양한 포유류 세포에 적합합니다.
Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium은 DMEM, DMEM/F-12, MEM, RPMI 1640, Ham's F-12로 배양된 CHO-S, CHO-K1, HEK 293, Jurkat, NIH 3T3 등 다양한 포유류 세포의 동결 보존을 위한 완전하고 즉시 사용할 수 있는 동결 배지입니다.

품질 및 성능이 테스트되었습니다.
Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium은 pH, 삼투압, 멸균, endotoxin에 대한 품질 테스트를 거쳤습니다. 각 lot는 CHO-K1 세포를 사용하여 성능을 테스트하였습니다.

cGMP 제조 및 품질 시스템
Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium은 New York Grand Island에 소재한 cGMP 준수 시설에서 제조됩니다. 이 시설 역시 의료기기 제조원으로 FDA에 등록되어 있으며 ISO 13485 표준 인증을 받은 기관입니다.
연구용으로만 사용하십시오. 진단용으로는 사용할 수 없습니다.
사양
세포 유형포유류 세포
제품라인Gibco, Recovery
제품 유형세포 배양 동결 배지
순도 또는 품질 등급연구 등급
수량50 mL
유통 기한12개월
배송 조건드라이아이스
Culture Type포유류 세포 배양
형태액체
Serum Level표준 혈청
멸균멸균 여과
첨가제 포함DMSO(10%), Phenol Red, DMSO (10%)
첨가제 없음페놀 레드
Unit SizeEach
구성 및 보관
보관 조건: -5 ∼ -20°C 차광 보관
배송 조건: 냉동
유통 기한: 제조일로부터 12개월

자주 묻는 질문(FAQ)

What is the procedure for cryopreserving mammalian cells?

Mammalian cells are cryopreserved to avoid loss by contamination, to minimize genetic change in continuous cell lines, and to avoid aging and transformation in finite cell lines. Before cryopreservation, cells should be characterized and checked for contamination.

There are several common media used to freeze cells. For serum-containing medium, the constituents may be as follows:
1) Complete medium containing 10% DMSO (dimethylsulfoxide)
2) 50% cell-conditioned medium with 50% fresh medium with 10% DMSO

Cryopreservation media generally consists of a base medium, cryopreservative, and a protein source. The cryopreservative and protein protect the cells from the stress of the freeze-thaw process. A serum-free medium has generally low or no protein, but one can still use it as a base for a cryopreservative medium in the following formulations:

1) 50% cell-conditioned serum free medium and 50% fresh serum-free medium containing 7.5% DMSO
2) Fresh serum-free medium containing 7.5% DMSO and 10% cell culture grade BSA

Protocol for Suspension Cultures:
1. Count the number of viable cells to be cryopreserved. Cells should be in log phase.
2. Centrifuge the cells at ~200 to 400 x g for 5 min to pellet cells.
3. Using a pipette, remove the supernatant down to the smallest volume without disturbing the cells.
4. Resuspend cells in freezing medium to a concentration of 1 x 10E7 to 5 x 10E7cells/ml for serum-containing medium, or 0.5 x 10E7to 1 x 10E7 cells/ml for serum-free medium.
5. Aliquot into cryogenic storage vials. Place vials on wet ice or in a 4°C refrigerator, and start the freezing procedure within 5 minutes.
6. Cells are frozen slowly at 1°C /min. This can be done by programmable coolers or by placing vials in an insulated box placed in a -70°C to -90°C freezer, then transferring to liquid nitrogen storage.

Protocol for Adherent Cultures:
1. Detach cells from the substrate with dissociation agents. Detach as gently as possible to minimize damage to the cells.
2. Resuspend the detached cells in a complete growth medium and establish the viable cell count.
3. Centrifuge at ~200 x g for 5 min to pellet cells.
4. Using a pipette, withdraw the supernatant down to the smallest volume without disturbing the cells.
5. Resuspend cells in freezing medium to a concentration of 5 x 10E6 to 1 x 10E7 cells/ml. Aliquot into cryogenic storage vials.
6. Place vials on wet ice or in a 4°C refrigerator, and start the freezing procedure within 5 min.
7. Cells are frozen slowly at 1°C /min. This can be done by programmable coolers or by placing vials in an insulated box placed in a -70°C to -90°C freezer, then transferring to liquid nitrogen storage.
Reference: Freshney, R. (1987) Culture of Animal Cells: A Manual of Basic Technique, p. 220, Alan R. Liss,Inc., New York.

Thawing of Cryopreserved Cells:
Cryopreserved cells are fragile and require gentle handling. Thaw cells quickly and plate directly into complete growth medium. If cells are particularly sensitive to cryopreservation (DMSO or glycerol), they are centrifuged to remove cryopreservative and then plated into growth medium. The following are suggested procedures for thawing cryopreserved cells:

- Centrifugation Method: Remove cells from storage and thaw quickly in a 37°C water bath. Place 1 or 2 ml of frozen cells in ~25 ml of complete growth medium. Mix very gently. Centrifuge cells at ~80 x g for 2 to 3 min. Discard supernatant. Gently Resuspend cells in complete growth medium and perform a viable cell count. Plate the cells. Cell innoculum should be at least 3 x 10E5 cells/ml.
- Direct Plating Method: Remove cells from storage and thaw quickly in a 37°C water bath. Plate cells directly with complete growth media.

Is there any difference between your Cell Culture Freezing Medium-Dimethylsulfoxide(DMSO) and the standard method using DMSO? Does it depend on the cell types? What protocol should I use for freezing cells?

Our Cell Culture Freezing Media is composed of DMEM, FBS, calf serum, and 10% DMSO. This is useful for many mammalian cells for freezing and is the same percentage of DMSO used in most methods. This product will work fine for most adherent cell lines grown with serum. A good general protocol for freezing cells can be found on our website by searching "Freezing cells protocol" from the home page.

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

Is it important to centrifuge and aspirate Recovery Cell Culture Freezing Medium before seeding into the flask?

Recovery Cell Culture Freezing Medium is meant for general cell culture applications where a wide range of growth media will be used. We recommend that you aspirate Recovery Cell Culture Freezing Medium before seeding, although other protocols can be substituted (this will need to be determined by the end user).

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

Can Recovery Cell Culture Freezing Medium be stored at 2 to 8 degrees C?

Recovery Cell Culture Freezing Medium should be stable at 2 to 8 degrees C for 1 week, although we have no data to support this.

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

Can Recovery Cell Culture Freezing Medium undergo multiple freeze thaw cycles?

There have not been any bench studies at this time. It is best to aliquot this product.

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

인용 및 참조 문헌 (1)

인용 및 참조 문헌
Abstract
Sleeping Beauty transposon mutagenesis of the rat genome in spermatogonial stem cells.
Authors:Ivics Z, Izsvák Z, Chapman KM, Hamra FK,
Journal:Methods
PubMed ID:21193047
'Since several aspects of physiology in rats have evolved to be more similar to humans than that of mice, it is highly desirable to link the rat into the process of annotating the human genome with function. However, the lack of technology for generating defined mutants in the rat genome ... More