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About This Item
NACRES:
NA.85
UNSPSC Code:
41171614
Product Name
Middlebrook ADC Growth Supplement, Enrichment supplement recommended for the cultivation of Mycobacteria
sterility
sterile (Filtered and Aseptic Handled)
form
liquid
shelf life
limited shelf life, expiry date on the label
application(s)
clinical testing
environmental
food and beverages
life science and biopharma
microbiology
veterinary
storage temp.
2-8°C
suitability
mycobacteria
Quality Level
Application
Specialized culture media supplement, designed to isolate and cultivate various Mycobacterial species.
General description
Middlebrook ADC growth supplement is used to isolate a wide variety of Mycobacteria including M. tuberculosis. It contains Bovine albumin, dextrose, and catalase. Bovine albumin neutralizes the toxic products. Dextrose is the fermentable sugar and catalase cleaves the toxic hydrogen peroxides which creates stress to the Mycobacteria cells thus, making it an ideal media for the cultivation of Mycobacterial species
Other Notes
Ingredients: (per vial)
Bovine albumin fraction V 2.5g
Dextrose 1.0g
Catalase 0.0015g
Distilled water 50 ml
Bovine albumin fraction V 2.5g
Dextrose 1.0g
Catalase 0.0015g
Distilled water 50 ml
Preparation Note
Warm up the refrigerated supplement to 45-50°C. Aseptically add the contents of the vial to 450 ml of sterile Middlebrook 7H9 Broth Base (M0178). Mix well and pour into sterile screw capped tubes.
Storage Class
12 - Non Combustible Liquids
wgk
WGK 3
flash_point_f
Not applicable
flash_point_c
Not applicable
ppe
Eyeshields, Gloves, type N95 (US)
Regulatory Information
常规特殊物品
常规特殊物品
含少量动物源组分生物产品
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Nancy Patience Motlalepula Komape et al.
BMC complementary and alternative medicine, 17(1), 128-128 (2017-02-27)
Tuberculosis is an infectious communicable disease and the causative agent of the disease has over the years developed resistance to streamline chemotherapeutic agents with dire consequences and there is a need for development of new and more potent alternatives. Constituents
Joshua N Gustine et al.
Current microbiology, 76(4), 398-409 (2019-01-04)
Cell wall hydrolases are enzymes that cleave bacterial cell walls by hydrolyzing specific bonds within peptidoglycan and other portions of the envelope. Two major sources of hydrolases in nature are from hosts and microbes. This study specifically investigated whether cell
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