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Gelatin from porcine skin

medium gel strength, suitable for microbiology

Synonym(s):

Gelatine, hydrolyzed collagen, collagen hydrolysate, gelatine hydrolysate

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About This Item

CAS Number:
EC Number:
MDL number:
UNSPSC Code:
41106212
NACRES:
NA.85

biological source

Porcine

Quality Level

sterility

non-sterile

form

powder

quality

medium gel strength

packaging

bottle of 100 g
bottle of 500 g

ign. residue

≤2%

loss

≤15% loss on drying

color

light yellow

pH

4.0-6.0 (25 °C, 67 mg/mL in H2O)

gel strength

165-195 g Bloom (67 mg/ml water)

solubility

H2O: 67 mg/mL at 50 °C, slightly hazy, slightly yellow

anion traces

chloride (Cl-): ≤3000 mg/kg

cation traces

Ca: ≤2000 mg/kg
Cd: ≤5 mg/kg
Co: ≤5 mg/kg
Cr: ≤10 mg/kg
Cu: ≤50 mg/kg
Fe: ≤50 mg/kg
K: ≤500 mg/kg
Mg: ≤500 mg/kg
Mn: ≤5 mg/kg
Na: ≤5000 mg/kg
Ni: ≤5 mg/kg
Pb: ≤5 mg/kg
Zn: ≤10 mg/kg

application(s)

microbiology

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General description

Gelatin from porcine skin is generated from the acidic digestion of collagen and is referred to as type A. It is a hydrocolloid and is rich in glycine, proline, and hydroxyproline, which impart structural stability. It is synthesized from the alkaline digestion of collagen from porcine. Gelatin takes up a random coil structure after digestion from the triple helical collagen.

Gelatin is a heterogeneous mixture of water-soluble proteins of high average molecular masses present in collagen. Proteins are extracted by boiling the relevant skin, tendons, ligaments, bones, etc., in water. Type A gelatin is derived from acid-cured tissue, and Type B from lime-cured tissue.

The Bloom number, determined by the Bloom gelometer, is an indication of the strength of a gel formed from a solution of the known concentration. The Bloom number is proportional to the average molecular mass. Bloom numbers of porcine skin Gelatin vary from 90 to 300 g. This product has a gel strength of 180.

Application

Gelatin has been used in many applications, such as in coating cell culture plates to improve attachment of cells, in PCR to stabilize Taq DNA, as a blocking reagent in Western blotting, ELISA, and immunochemistry, and as a component of media for species differentiation in bacteriology.

Components

Gelatin is a heterogeneous mixture of water-soluble proteins of high average molecular masses, present in collagen. Proteins are extracted by boiling the relevant skin, tendons, ligaments, bones, etc. in water. Type A gelatin is derived from acid-cured tissue. Type B is derived from lime-cured tissue.

Caution

Dry gelatin, when stored in airtight containers at room temperature, will remain unchanged for many years. When heated at 100°C in the presence of air, it swells becomes soft and disintegrates to a carbonaceous mass with evolution of pyridine bases and ammonia.

Preparation Note

This product is derived from porcine skin. Gelatin is soluble in hot than in cold water. It is practically insoluble in most organic solvents such as alcohol, chloroform, carbon disulfide, carbon tetrachloride, ether, benzene, acetone, and oils. Manufactured by Gelita AG

Storage Class Code

11 - Combustible Solids

WGK

nwg

Personal Protective Equipment

dust mask type N95 (US), Eyeshields, Gloves

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Bin Liu et al.
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Gelatin Liquefaction by Bacteria.
M Levine et al.
Journal of bacteriology, 8(4), 297-306 (1923-07-01)
Leslie Crews et al.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 28(16), 4250-4260 (2008-04-18)
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Ballistic gelatin is the most common tissue simulant used to reproduce the penetration of projectiles into muscle but published data to support its use are primarily based on bullets, despite explosive fragments being the most common cause of injury to
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This article describes the production of a low-cost training phantom for ultrasound guided invasive procedures of peripheral and central veins and presents a video of the process. The phantom can be adapted for use with other ultrasound techniques. It is

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