Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chemically_defined_medium> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 57 of
57
with 100 triples per page.
- Chemically_defined_medium abstract "A chemically defined medium is a growth medium suitable for the in vitro cell culture of human or animal cells in which all of the chemical components are known. Standard cell culture media are commonly supplemented with animal serum (such as fetal bovine serum, FBS) as a source of nutrients and other ill-defined factors. The technical disadvantages to using serum include its undefined nature, batch-to-batch variability in composition, and the risk of contamination.There is a clear distinction between serum-free media and chemically defined media. Serum-free media may contain undefined animal-derived products such as serum albumin (purified from blood), hydrolysates, growth factors, hormones, carrier proteins, and attachment factors. These undefined animal-derived products will contain complex contaminants, such as the lipid content of albumin. In contrast, chemically defined media require that all of the components must be identified and have their exact concentrations known. Therefore, a chemically defined medium must be entirely free of animal-derived components and cannot contain either fetal bovine serum, bovine serum albumin or human serum albumin. To achieve this chemically defined media is commonly supplemented with recombinant versions of albumin and growth factors, usually derived from rice or E. coli, or synthetic chemical such as the polymer polyvinyl alcohol which can reproduce some of the functions of BSA/HSA.The constituents of a chemically defined media include: a basal media (such as DMEM, F12, or RPMI 1640, containing amino acids, vitamins, inorganic salts, buffers, antioxidants and energy sources), which is supplemented with recombinant albumin, chemically defined lipids, recombinant insulin and/or zinc, recombinant transferrin or iron, selenium and an antioxidant thiol such as 2-mercaptoethanol or 1-thioglycerol.".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageExternalLink products.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageExternalLink 332-032442_SFMBrochure.pdf.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageExternalLink PerspectivesWEB.pdf.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageExternalLink page_13875.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageID "31040311".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageLength "7017".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageOutDegree "27".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageRevisionID "695825834".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink 2-Mercaptoethanol.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink 3-Mercaptopropane-1,2-diol.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Animal_culture.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Biological_Industries.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Biological_immortality.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Bovine_serum_albumin.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Category:Biotechnology.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cell_biology.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cell_culture.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Category:Molecular_biology_techniques.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Cell_(biology).
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Cell_culture.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Cell_culture_assays.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Fetal_bovine_serum.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Growth_medium.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Human_serum_albumin.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink In_vitro.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Insulin.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Invitrogen.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink List_of_distinct_cell_types_in_the_adult_human_body.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Organ_culture.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Plant_tissue_culture.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Polyvinyl_alcohol.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Selenium.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Thiol.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Tissue_culture.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLink Transferrin.
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chemically defined medium".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLinkText "chemically defined media".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLinkText "chemically defined medium".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageWikiLinkText "culture media".
- Chemically_defined_medium wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Chemically_defined_medium subject Category:Biotechnology.
- Chemically_defined_medium subject Category:Cell_biology.
- Chemically_defined_medium subject Category:Cell_culture.
- Chemically_defined_medium subject Category:Molecular_biology_techniques.
- Chemically_defined_medium hypernym Medium.
- Chemically_defined_medium type Organism.
- Chemically_defined_medium type Technique.
- Chemically_defined_medium type Organism.
- Chemically_defined_medium comment "A chemically defined medium is a growth medium suitable for the in vitro cell culture of human or animal cells in which all of the chemical components are known. Standard cell culture media are commonly supplemented with animal serum (such as fetal bovine serum, FBS) as a source of nutrients and other ill-defined factors.".
- Chemically_defined_medium label "Chemically defined medium".
- Chemically_defined_medium sameAs Q5090513.
- Chemically_defined_medium sameAs مستنبت_محدد_التركيب_الكيميائي.
- Chemically_defined_medium sameAs m.0gg6gj6.
- Chemically_defined_medium sameAs Q5090513.
- Chemically_defined_medium wasDerivedFrom Chemically_defined_medium?oldid=695825834.
- Chemically_defined_medium isPrimaryTopicOf Chemically_defined_medium.