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GELATINASE AND THE GATES-GILMAN-COWGILL METHOD OF PEPSIN ESTIMATION

GELATINASE AND THE GATES-GILMAN-COWGILL METHOD OF PEPSIN ESTIMATION The Gates photographic film method for pepsin estimation as developed by Gilman and Cowgill measures an activity corresponding to that determined by the hemoglobin method of Anson and Mirsky rather than that resulting from the use of the gelatin viscosity technique. Therefore, the presence of gelatinase is not a source of great error in the gelatin film procedure. Footnotes Accepted: 15 June 1933 http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of General Physiology Rockefeller University Press

GELATINASE AND THE GATES-GILMAN-COWGILL METHOD OF PEPSIN ESTIMATION

The Journal of General Physiology , Volume 17 (1): 35 – Sep 20, 1933

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Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Copyright
© 1933 Rockefeller University Press
ISSN
0022-1295
eISSN
1540-7748
DOI
10.1085/jgp.17.1.35
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The Gates photographic film method for pepsin estimation as developed by Gilman and Cowgill measures an activity corresponding to that determined by the hemoglobin method of Anson and Mirsky rather than that resulting from the use of the gelatin viscosity technique. Therefore, the presence of gelatinase is not a source of great error in the gelatin film procedure. Footnotes Accepted: 15 June 1933

Journal

The Journal of General PhysiologyRockefeller University Press

Published: Sep 20, 1933

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