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What to do if there is Nanobacteria contamination in the cell factory
Thu Mar 03 14:46:15 CST 2022
Nanobacteria is often encountered in cell culture. After the cells are contaminated, the adherent growth will not be affected in a short period of time, and the medium will not quickly turn yellow or turbid like bacteria and fungi. So, what to do if there is Nanobacteria contamination in the cell factory? -
Four detection methods for mycoplasma contamination in cell factories
Wed Mar 02 10:55:17 CST 2022
Mycoplasma contamination is a very common problem when culturing cells in cell factories. Unlike other contaminations, mycoplasma-contaminated cells generally do not become cloudy, so it is difficult to judge with the naked eye. There are four ways to determine whether cells are contaminated with mycoplasma: -
What to do if bacterial contamination occurs in cell factories
Mon Feb 28 11:50:32 CST 2022
Bacterial contamination is a common source of contamination when using cell factories to culture cells, including Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus albus, Pseudomonas, etc. What should be done if the cells are contaminated by bacteria? -
How to deal with mold contamination in cell factories
Fri Feb 25 10:11:47 CST 2022
Mold contamination is one of the things that researchers are very worried about in cell culture experiments, often leading to project delays and the loss of scarce cells. So how should mold contamination in cell factories be dealt with to reduce losses? -
Common contamination of cell factory cultured cells - microbial contamination
Thu Feb 24 15:20:07 CST 2022
Cell factories play an important role in large-scale cell culture such as vaccine preparation and lentiviral vectors. When culturing cells, various kinds of pollution are very troublesome. Among the pollution sources, microbial pollution is a relatively common type of pollution.
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