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Gibco™ Modified IMEM (Improved Minimum Essential Medium), with L-glutamine, without gentamicin sulfate

Description
Requires
Supplementation
Minimum Essential Medium (MEM) is one of the most commonly used of all cell culture media. MEM can be used with a variety of suspension and adherent mammalian cells, including HeLa, BHK-21, 293, HEP-2, HT-1080, MCF-7, fibroblasts, and primary rat astrocytes. We offer a variety of Gibco™ MEM modifications for a range of cell culture applications. Find the right formulation using the media selector tool.
This MEM is modified as follows:
With: L-glutamine, Proline, Sodium Pyruvate, Zinc, Phenol Red
Without: Gentamycin, HEPES, Insulin
The complete formulation is available.
Gibco™ Richter's MEM is a modified formulation of Eagle's MEM that contains iron, zinc, putrescine, fatty acids, and gentamycin. Richter's modification also includes very high concentrations of both choline chloride and i-Inositol. This product was further modified with L-glutamine, and without gentamicin sulfate.
Product Use
For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
Gibco™ MEM contains no proteins, lipids, or growth factors. Therefore, MEM requires supplementation, commonly with 10% Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS). MEM uses a sodium bicarbonate buffer system (2.2 g/L) and therefore requires a 5-10% CO2 environment to maintain physiological pH.
Order Info
Shipping Condition: Room Temperature
Compliance
Gibco Richter's MEM is manufactured at a cGMP compliant facility, located in Grand Island, New York. The facility is registered with the FDA as a medical device manufacturer and is certified to ISO 13485 standards.
Specifications
Specifications
| Cell Line | HeLa, BHK-21, 293, HEP-2, HT-1080, MCF-7, and fibroblasts |
| Cell Type | Primary Rat Astrocytes |
| Classification | Animal Origin-free |
| Concentration | 1 X |
| Form | Liquid |
| Product Type | MEM (Minimum Essential Medium) |
| Sterility | Sterile-filtered |
| With Additives | Low Glucose, Glutamine, Phenol Red, Sodium Pyruvate, Zinc |
| Without Additives | No Gentamicin, No HEPES |
| Manufacturing Quality | cGMP-compliant under the ISO 13485 standard |
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Generally speaking, media can be used for up to three weeks after supplementation with serum. There are no formal studies to support this, but it is the rule of thumb used by our scientists.
We routinely ship media that require long-term storage in the refrigerator at room temperature. We have done studies on representative media formulations to show that media can be at room temperature for up to a week without a problem.
Very often mycoplasma contamination cannot be removed from the culture so it should be discarded. You may have a unique culture that you prefer not to discard and would like to try to clean it. Ciprofloxacin and Plasmocin have reportedly been used for this application. If interested in a protocol or directions for use, check with the antibiotic supplier or published literature. Note that mycoplasma are very difficult to remove from culture and spread easily so the treated cultures should be quarantined until clear of mycoplasma, and your laboratory should be thoroughly cleaned.
Try changing the medium or serum. Compare media formulations for differences in glucose, amino acids, and other components. Compare an old lot of serum with a new lot. Increase initial cell inoculums. Lastly, adapt cells sequentially to new medium.
This can occur if cells are overly trypsinized. Trypsinize for a shorter time or use less trypsin. Mycoplasma contamination could also cause this problem. Segregate your culture and test for mycoplasma infection. Lastly, check for attachment factors in the medium.
For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.