Encyclopedia > Ampicillin

  Article Content

Ampicillin

Ampicillin (C16H18N3O4S ; CAS[?] No.: 69-53-4) is an aminopenicillin[?] and, as such, is a broad-spectrum antibiotic and has been used extensively to treat bacterial infections since 1961. It is suspected to cause certain types of cancer in humans and animals. Belonging to the group of beta-lactam antibiotics[?], ampicillin is able to penetrate Gram-negative bacteria. It inhibits the third and final stage of bacterial cell wall synthesis, which ultimately leads to cell lysis[?], so it belongs to a group of bactericidal antibiotics.

Ampicillin is often used in molecular biology as a test for the uptake of genes (e.g., by plasmids) by bacteria (e.g., E. coli). A gene that is to be inserted into a bacterium is coupled to a gene coding for an ampicillin resistance (in E. coli, usually the bla gene, coding for β-lactamase). The treated bacteria are then grown on a medium containing ampicillin. Only those bacteria that carry the ampicillin resistance and, therefore, the gene can survive.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Canadian Music Hall of Fame

... Complete list of Inductees 1978 Guy Lombardo 1978 Oscar Peterson 1979 Hank Snow 1980 Paul Anka 1981 Joni Mitchell 1982 Neil Young 1983 Glenn Gould 1986 ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 25.5 ms