G9752
Gum arabic from acacia tree
branched polysaccharide
Synonym(s):
Acacia gum
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About This Item
Recommended Products
biological source
plant (Acacia)
Quality Level
form
powder
color
white to faint beige
storage temp.
room temp
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General description
Gum arabic from acacia tree is extracted from the branches of Acacia senegal and Acacia seyal trees. It is an edible dried gummy exudate. Gum Arabic has high solubility and is used in food industry as a stabilizer, emulsifier, flavouring agent, thickener and surface-finishing agent. It initiates turbidity or hinders sugar crystallization. Gum arabic inhibits color pigmentation and protein precipitation in wine production.
Application
Gum arabic from acacia tree has been used:
- as an emulsifying agent to determine lipase activity in shrimps
- for the visualization of mossy fiber sprouting
- as an immunogen and for coating microtitre wells in plate-trapped antigen ELISAs (PTA-ELISAs)
- for silver enhancement for immunohistochemistry
- as a component for Timm′s staining solution
- in nitrocellulose-based soil adhesion assay
- to separate few-layer graphene (FLG) from bulk graphite layers
Other Notes
Believed to be a branched polymer of galactose, rhamnose, arabinose, and glucuronic acid as the calcium, magnesium, and potassium salts with a mol. wt. of approx. 250,000.
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Storage Class Code
11 - Combustible Solids
WGK
WGK 3
Flash Point(F)
Not applicable
Flash Point(C)
Not applicable
Personal Protective Equipment
dust mask type N95 (US), Eyeshields, Gloves
Certificates of Analysis (COA)
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Acacia gum: History of the future
Food Hydrocolloids, 78, 140-160 (2018)
A quantitative method for the high throughput screening for the soil adhesion properties of plant and microbial polysaccharides and exudates
Plant and Soil, 1-9 (2018)
Xenograft of human umbilical mesenchymal stem cells from Wharton?s jelly as a potential therapy for rat pilocarpine-induced epilepsy
Brain, behavior, and immunity, 54(3), 45-58 (2016)
Purification and characterization of an intracellular lipase from pleopods of whiteleg shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei)
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology. Part B, Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, 158(1), 99-105 (2011)
Intra-amygdaloid injection of kainic acid in rats with genetic absence epilepsy: the relationship of typical absence epilepsy and temporal lobe epilepsy
The Journal of Neuroscience, 28(31), 7828-7836 (2008)
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