Sign In to View Organizational & Contract Pricing.
Select a Size
Change View
| Size/SKU | Availability | Price |
|---|---|---|
100 units | Please contact Customer Service for Availability | PLN 1,310.00 |
About This Item
CAS Number:
UNSPSC Code:
12352204
NACRES:
NA.54
EC Number:
232-740-7
MDL number:
Specific activity:
≥0.20 unit/mg solid
PLN 1,310.00
Please contact Customer Service for Availability
form
lyophilized powder
Quality Segment
specific activity
≥0.20 unit/mg solid
mol wt
>5 kDa
storage temp.
2-8°C
Application
Citrate Lyase from Klebsiella pneumoniae has been used in the digestion of low molecular weight human milk fraction (>5 kDa referred to as 5kF).
Biochem/physiol Actions
Citrate lyase is found in several microorganisms and catalyzes the first step of citrate degradation, forming acetate and oxaloacetate. The enzyme contains 3 polypeptide subunits, α-subunit (a transferase), β-subunit (acyl lyase) and γ-subunit (acyl-carrier protein).[1]
Physical form
Lyophilized powder containing bovine serum albumin, sucrose, and MgSO4
Other Notes
One unit will convert 1.0 μmole of citrate to oxalacetate per min at pH 7.6 at 25 °C.
1 of 1
This Item | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| specific activity ≥0.20 unit/mg solid | specific activity ≥0.25 U/mg (At 25 °C with citrate as the substrate.) | specific activity ≥0.1 unit/mg solid | specific activity 0.5-1.5 units/mg protein (using chondroitin sulfate A as substrate) |
| form lyophilized powder | form lyophilized | form powder | form lyophilized powder |
| mol wt >5 kDa | mol wt - | mol wt - | mol wt - |
| storage temp. 2-8°C | storage temp. 2-8°C | storage temp. −20°C | storage temp. −20°C |
| Quality Level 200 | Quality Level - | Quality Level 200 | Quality Level 200 |
Storage Class
11 - Combustible Solids
wgk
WGK 3
flash_point_f
Not applicable
flash_point_c
Not applicable
ppe
Eyeshields, Gloves, type N95 (US)
Choose from one of the most recent versions:
Already Own This Product?
Find documentation for the products that you have recently purchased in the Document Library.



