The Binding Site's 7th International Symposium 2015
Clinical Applications of Free Light Chain and Heavy/Light Chain analysis
Clinical Applications of Free Light Chain and Heavy/Light Chain analysis
Animal component-free cell dissociation solution, Defined alternative to porcine trypsin
Animal component-free cell dissociation solution, Defined alternative to porcine trypsin
Type VII, lyophilized powder, 100,000 units/g solid (without added oxygen)
Bornstein and Traub Type IV, powder, BioReagent, suitable for cell culture
Purify endotoxin-free plasmid DNA (<0.1 EU/µg) using magnetic beads.
For isolation of free-circulating DNA from human plasma or serum
Serum-free culture supplement for expansion and differentiation of human granulocytes
Serum-free culture supplement for expansion and differentiation of human monocytes
Stabilized feeder-free maintenance medium for human ES and iPS cells
Defined, feeder-free maintenance medium for human ES and iPS cells
Receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B ligand, animal component-free
Next-generation label-free single-cell isolation for cell line development.
A push-button solution to analyze lipid droplet dynamics, label-free.
11mm aluminum crimp cap with type 5 rubber/PTFE liner (grey)
8mm aluminum crimp cap(blue) with type 5 rubber/PTFE liner
VACUU·PURE® reliably delivers the benefits of oil-free vacuum technology down to the 10-3 mbar range. The working principle of VACUU·PURE® is based on gap sealing. The unique operating principle enables contact-free rotation of the spindles allowing the vacuum pump to operate oil- and abrasion-free making it an ideal choice for clean processes and pure products. There is no scheduled maintenance to replace wear parts and no ne…
Serum-free, xeno-free media for the efficient and reproducible differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells to osteogenic, adipogenic, and chondrogenic lineages. The MSCgo™ family of differentiation media is complete and ready-to-use with optimized differentiation protocols.
A new hope for Psoriasis sufferers and difficult-to-treat dermatological diseases
Researchers hope to use graphene-based materials as an effective thermal camouflage