Trehalose

Description

Trehalose — Bioprotective Disaccharide & Stabilizing Agent

Trehalose (α-D-glucopyranosyl-(1→1)-α-D-glucopyranoside) is a nonreducing disaccharide composed of two glucose units joined by a 1,1-α bond. It is widely used in biochemical, biotechnological, and cell biology applications as a stabilizer, osmolyte, cryoprotectant, and protein protectant. Trehalose is known for its remarkable ability to protect biomolecules, cells, and tissues against stressors like dehydration, freezing, oxidation, and heat. 


Key Features & Advantages

  • Nonreducing sugar — It does not react with proteins (e.g. via Maillard glycation), making it safer for preserving biomolecules. 

  • Protein & enzyme stabilization — Helps maintain folding, prevent aggregation, and increase shelf stability of enzymes, antibodies, and proteins during stress or storage. 

  • Cryoprotection & lyoprotection — Widely used in freezing or lyophilization formulations to protect cells, tissues, or molecules from damage during freeze/thaw or drying processes. 

  • Osmolyte / chemical chaperone — Trehalose acts as an osmoprotectant (balancing osmotic stress) and helps stabilize macromolecular structures in harsh conditions. 

  • Low reactivity & high water affinity — It forms hydrogen-bond networks and slows bulk water dynamics, contributing to biostability of surrounding molecules. 


Suggested Applications & Usage Notes

  • Formulation / Stabilization — Include trehalose in buffers, storage solutions, or lyophilization matrices to protect proteins, vaccines, liposomes, or nanoparticles.

  • Cryopreservation — Use as an additive in cell freezing media to reduce ice damage and improve viability post-thaw.

  • Freeze-drying / lyophilization — Employ as a lyoprotectant to maintain structural integrity of biomolecules during drying and rehydration.

  • Stress & stability testing — Useful in experiments testing the effect of dehydration, temperature shifts, or oxidation on biopolymers or cells.

Practical Tips:

  • Prepare fresh stocks in water or compatible buffer; filter-sterilize if needed.

  • Typical working concentrations vary, but 0.1 M to 1 M ranges are common in stabilization protocols (optimize per system).

  • Because trehalose is fairly soluble but may crystallize at high concentrations, warm gently or stir to dissolve fully.

  • Monitor pH and ionic strength when formulating with other excipients, as trehalose is relatively inert but increases osmolality.

PubChem Chemical ID: 24802548

Trehalose

View Sizes & Pricing

Catalog Number:
T-575-25
CAS Number:
6138-23-4
$559.00
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In Stock
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    Description

    Trehalose — Bioprotective Disaccharide & Stabilizing Agent

    Trehalose (α-D-glucopyranosyl-(1→1)-α-D-glucopyranoside) is a nonreducing disaccharide composed of two glucose units joined by a 1,1-α bond. It is widely used in biochemical, biotechnological, and cell biology applications as a stabilizer, osmolyte, cryoprotectant, and protein protectant. Trehalose is known for its remarkable ability to protect biomolecules, cells, and tissues against stressors like dehydration, freezing, oxidation, and heat. 


    Key Features & Advantages

    • Nonreducing sugar — It does not react with proteins (e.g. via Maillard glycation), making it safer for preserving biomolecules. 

    • Protein & enzyme stabilization — Helps maintain folding, prevent aggregation, and increase shelf stability of enzymes, antibodies, and proteins during stress or storage. 

    • Cryoprotection & lyoprotection — Widely used in freezing or lyophilization formulations to protect cells, tissues, or molecules from damage during freeze/thaw or drying processes. 

    • Osmolyte / chemical chaperone — Trehalose acts as an osmoprotectant (balancing osmotic stress) and helps stabilize macromolecular structures in harsh conditions. 

    • Low reactivity & high water affinity — It forms hydrogen-bond networks and slows bulk water dynamics, contributing to biostability of surrounding molecules. 


    Suggested Applications & Usage Notes

    • Formulation / Stabilization — Include trehalose in buffers, storage solutions, or lyophilization matrices to protect proteins, vaccines, liposomes, or nanoparticles.

    • Cryopreservation — Use as an additive in cell freezing media to reduce ice damage and improve viability post-thaw.

    • Freeze-drying / lyophilization — Employ as a lyoprotectant to maintain structural integrity of biomolecules during drying and rehydration.

    • Stress & stability testing — Useful in experiments testing the effect of dehydration, temperature shifts, or oxidation on biopolymers or cells.

    Practical Tips:

    • Prepare fresh stocks in water or compatible buffer; filter-sterilize if needed.

    • Typical working concentrations vary, but 0.1 M to 1 M ranges are common in stabilization protocols (optimize per system).

    • Because trehalose is fairly soluble but may crystallize at high concentrations, warm gently or stir to dissolve fully.

    • Monitor pH and ionic strength when formulating with other excipients, as trehalose is relatively inert but increases osmolality.

    PubChem Chemical ID: 24802548

    Product Specifications

    Catalog ID: T-575
    CAS #: 6138-23-4
    MW: 378.33 g/mol
    Storage/handling: Store at room temperature.

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