Waiting
Login-Verarbeitung ...

Trial ends in Request Full Access Tell Your Colleague About Jove
Concept
JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments
Encyclopedia of Experiments: Cancer Research

Ein Abonnement für JoVE ist erforderlich, um diesen Inhalt ansehen zu können. Melden Sie sich an oder starten Sie Ihre kostenlose Testversion.

 

Isolation of Nuclei from Fresh Frozen Glioma Tissues: A Method to Obtain Intact Nuclei from Glioma Tumor Samples

Article

Transcript

To isolate nuclei, begin by taking a fresh frozen glioma sample - a tumor that originates in the glial cells of the brain - in a Petri dish.

Place the petri dish on ice to avoid tissue degradation.

Next, mince the tissue sample into small pieces.

Add a pre-chilled lysis buffer to the minced tissue pieces. Transfer the mixture to a Dounce  homogenizer. Using the pestle, homogenize the tissue to disintegrate the cells and initiate lysis.

Now, transfer the homogenate to a microcentrifuge tube containing a fresh lysis buffer.

Mechanically disrupt the homogenate using a wide-bore pipette tip. This step facilitates the release of cytoplasmic organelles from the cells.

Subsequently, using an appropriately sized cell strainer, filter the homogenate into a fresh tube to remove tissue debris and other contaminants.

After filtration, take the filtrate containing various cell organelles.

Centrifuge the filtrate at a low speed to pellet the denser nuclei at the bottom while the other cell organelles remain in the supernatant.

Discard the organelle-containing supernatant. Store the crude nuclei-rich pellet in a suitable storage buffer for further downstream sequencing.

Read Article

Get cutting-edge science videos from JoVE sent straight to your inbox every month.

Waiting X
Simple Hit Counter