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Merck

T6522

Trypsin inhibitor from Glycine max (soybean)

powder, BioReagent, suitable for cell culture

Synonym(s):

SBTI

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About This Item

CAS Number:
UNSPSC Code:
12352204
EC Number:
232-906-9
NACRES:
NA.75
MDL number:
Specific activity:
(One mg will inhibit 1.0-3.0 mg of trypsin with activity of approx. 10,000 BAEE units per mg protein.)
Biological source:
Glycine max (soybean)
Concentration:
10 mg/mL
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biological source

Glycine max (soybean)

Quality Level

type

Type I-S

product line

BioReagent

form

powder

specific activity

(One mg will inhibit 1.0-3.0 mg of trypsin with activity of approx. 10,000 BAEE units per mg protein.)

mol wt

20.1 kDa

concentration

10 mg/mL

technique(s)

cell culture | mammalian: suitable

solubility

balanced salt solution: 1 mg/mL, serum-free medium: soluble

shipped in

ambient

storage temp.

2-8°C

Application

This product has been tested for cell culture applications. Trypsin has been used in a study to assess the potential application in animal cell culture of an alkaline protease from a ton-toxigenic mangrove isolate of Vibri sp. V26. Trypsin has also been used in a study to improve the detection of fungi in eosinophilic mucin.

Biochem/physiol Actions

This inhibitor acts against trypsin, and chymotrypsin and plasmin to a lesser extent. It will also inhibit proteases with mechanisms similar to trypsin, plasma kallikrein and coagulation Factor X. The trypsin inhibitor will not act against metalloproteases, tissue-baseed kallikrein, acid proteases, or thio proteases. This inhibitor acts by forming a 1:1 stoichiometric complex with the protease active site, and then cleaving a single arginine-isoleucine bond on the inhibitor. The inhibition is both reversible and pH dependent.

Preparation Note

The trypsin inhibitor is soluble in water and phosphate buffers at 10 mg/mL. It is soluble in balanced salt solutions at 1 mg/mL and in serum-free media. Concentrated solutions greater than 10 mg/mL may be hazy and have a yellow to amber color. After trypsinizing cells, resuspend in 1 mL trypsin inhibitor solution at 1 mg/mL for every mL of trypsin solution used for dissociation. The cell suspension should then be centrifuged at 1000 rpm, forming a cell pellet.

Solutions can retain activity when stored short-term at 2-8° C. Solutions are stable in frozen aliquots at -20°C.

Analysis Note

One mg of trypsin inhibitor will inhibit 1.0-3.0 mg trypsin of activity ~10,000 BAEE units per mg protein.

Other Notes

One trypsin unit = A253 of 0.001 per minute with N-alpha-benzoyl-L-arginine ethyl ester (BAEE) as substrate at pH 7.6 at 25 °C.
One trypsin unit will produce a ΔA253 of 0.001 per min with BAEE as substrate at pH 7.6 at 25 °C; reaction volume 3.2 ml, 1 cm light path.
The soybean trypsin inhibitor is a monomeric protein containing 181 amino acid residues in a single polypeptide chain crosslinked by two disulfide bridges.


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pictograms

Health hazard

signalword

Danger

hcodes

Hazard Classifications

Resp. Sens. 1 - Skin Sens. 1

Storage Class

11 - Combustible Solids

wgk

WGK 3

flash_point_f

Not applicable

flash_point_c

Not applicable

ppe

Eyeshields, Gloves, type N95 (US)



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A Sharifloo et al.
Bulletin of entomological research, 108(4), 501-509 (2017-11-08)
A comprehensive study on digestive trypsin was undertaken in the larval midgut of Pieris brassicae L. Results of enzymatic compartmentalization showed a significantly higher activity of crude trypsin in the anterior larval midgut rather than posterior-midgut. Using Diethylaminoethyl cellulose fast
Benjamin Lant et al.
Cell reports, 24(11), 2857-2868 (2018-09-13)
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are neurovascular lesions caused by mutations in one of three genes (CCM1-3). Loss of CCM3 causes the poorest prognosis, and little is known about how it regulates vascular integrity. The C. elegans ccm-3 gene regulates the development
Jonas Goldin Diness et al.
Frontiers in pharmacology, 11, 749-749 (2020-06-09)
Hypokalemia reduces the cardiac repolarization reserve. This prolongs the QT-interval and increases the risk of ventricular arrhythmia; a risk that is exacerbated by administration of classical class 3 anti-arrhythmic agents.Small conductance Ca2+-activated K+-channels (KCa2) are a promising new atrial selective