"pH+Electrodes&pageNo=30&view=easy"
DEMO 77420-30 WITH 77602-30 1 * 1 items
Supplier: Avantor Fluid Handling
DEMO 77420-30 WITH 77602-30 1 * 1 items
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Bentonite, grey powder
Supplier: MP Biomedicals
Bentonite is used as aluminum silicate (clay), emulsifier and adsorbent for proteins and virus particles.
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Spherical Dewar flasks, type AL
Supplier: KGW
Dewar flasks made from silvered borosilicate glass, brushed aluminium protective covering.
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1-Decyl-2-methylimidazole
Supplier: Thermo Scientific
1-Decyl-2-methylimidazole
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Magnesium chloride, Sigma-Aldrich®
Supplier: Merck
Magnesium chloride, Sigma-Aldrich®
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5-Chloro-2-fluorobenzoic acid
Supplier: Molekula
5-Chloro-2-fluorobenzoic acid
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Baths and circulators, stainless steel, SAHARA series
Supplier: THERMO ELECTRON LED
The SAHARA series are suitable for internal or external circulation and have a choice of eight different controllers that are suitable for various different applications.
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Guar gum, powder, Sigma-Aldrich®
Supplier: Merck
Guar gum is isolated from the endosperm of the guar or gavar bean.
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2-Mercaptobenzothiazole, Sigma-Aldrich®
Supplier: Merck
2-Mercaptobenzothiazole, Sigma-Aldrich®
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Magnesium chloride, Sigma-Aldrich®
Supplier: Merck
Magnesium chloride, Sigma-Aldrich®
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2,4-Dinitrobenzoic acid, Sigma-Aldrich®
Supplier: Merck
2,4-Dinitrobenzoic acid, Sigma-Aldrich®
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2,6-Dichlorobenzoic acid, Sigma-Aldrich®
Supplier: Merck
2,6-Dichlorobenzoic acid, Sigma-Aldrich®
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1,7-Octadiene ≥98%, Sigma-Aldrich®
Supplier: Merck
1,7-Octadiene ≥98%, Sigma-Aldrich®
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VWR® VisiScope® TL384B FL1 B, Fluorescence Microscope
Supplier: VWR Collection
These fluorescence microscopes are designed for routine lab applications.
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Anti-Avian Influenza Neuraminidase Rabbit Polyclonal Antibody
Supplier: ProSci Inc.
Avian Influenza Neuraminidase Antibody: Influenza A virus is a major public health threat, killing more than 30, 000 people per year in the USA. Novel influenza virus strains emerge periodically to which humans have little or no immunity, resulting in devastating pandemics. Influenza A can exist in a variety of animals; however it is in birds that all subtypes can be found. These subtypes are classified based on the combination of the virus coat glycoproteins hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) subtypes. During 1997, an H5N1 avian influenza virus was determined to be the cause of death in 6 of 18 infected patients in Hong Kong. There was some evidence of human to human spread of this virus, but it is thought that the transmission efficiency was fairly low. Although it has been known that cleavage site and glycosylation patterns of the HA protein play important roles in determining the pathogenicity of H5 avian influenza viruses, it has only recently been shown that an additional glycosylation site within the globular head of the NA protein also contributes to the high virulence of the H5N1 virus.



