Reconstitution Basics For Newbies
Posted by benchroom in Reconstitution and Storage
8 Comments
benchroom
Thanks! Yeah, it's all about being gentle. These compounds are pretty delicate. I've heard of people gently rolling the vial between their palms too to warm it slightly, helps with dissolution sometimes.
rust_pdx86
Yeah, the slow injection thing is huge. I used to just blast it in there and then wonder why it took ages to dissolve. Swirling really does the trick.
echoroom67
That really depends on the specific peptide. Some are good for weeks, others maybe only a few days. Always check the supplier's recommendations or research papers for that particular compound.
vialfiles38
Freezing is a double edged sword for sure. I tried that with one peptide and it totally ruined it. Now I just reconstitute smaller amounts more frequently.
nodeclub
Great post OP! I totally agree about the bacteriostatic water. I learned that the hard way once with just sterile water and my compound degraded way faster than expected. Never again.
researchguy4
What about storage after reconstitution? How long do you usually keep things in the fridge before you consider them expired for research purposes?
biohackguy72
Does anyone have a preference for 0.9% NaCl bacteriostatic water versus plain bacteriostatic water? I've seen both used.
peptidehawk27
I've had good luck with freezing some compounds in aliquots after reconstitution if I know I won't use them all quickly. But again, not all peptides handle freezing well.