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Gibco™ Waymouth's Medium

Description
Waymouth's is a chemically defined medium developed by Charity Waymouth and originally formulated for studies on the nutrition, metabolism, and growth of mouse Strain L sublines, NCTC clone 929 (L929 cells) in a serum-free environment. Waymouth's medium is also used for the culture of whole organs and a broad range of cell types, such as carcinoma cell lines.
This Waymouth's medium is modified as follows:
With: L-glutamine, Phenol Red
Without: HEPES
The complete formulation is available.
Order Info
Shipping Condition: Room Temperature
Specifications
Specifications
| Cell Line | L929, carcinomas |
| Cell Type | Whole Organs |
| Classification | Animal Origin-free |
| Concentration | 1 X |
| Form | Liquid |
| Product Type | Waymouth's Medium |
| Sterility | Sterile-filtered |
| With Additives | High Glucose, Glutamine, Phenol Red |
| Without Additives | No HEPES, No Sodium Pyruvate |
| 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 or Further Manufacturing. Not for diagnostic use or direct administration into humans or animals.