Publication | Closed Access
Albumin Replacement by Fatty Acids in Clonal Growth of Mammalian Cells
75
Citations
7
References
1963
Year
Cell CultureCell GrowthLinoleic AcidCellular PhysiologyFatty AcidsBioanalysisFeed AdditiveMost Albumin PreparationsPublic HealthAlbumin ReplacementChromatographyAnimal PhysiologyBiochemistryCellular NutritionEndocrinologyCell BiologyClonal GrowthPhysiologyBiotechnologyTissue CultureMetabolismMedicineLipid SynthesisExtracellular Matrix
Clonal growth of Chinese hamster strain CHD-3 cells in a synthetic nutrient mixture supplemented with 10 micrograms of purified fetuin per milliliter exhibits an apparent requirement for serum albumin. The albumin can be replaced by linoleic acid, which occurs as a tightly bound component of most albumin preparations. Linolenic acid and corn oil can also replace albumin, while oleic acid and esters of linoleic and linolenic acids cannot.
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