[Histonet] Re: Freezing small pieces of skeletal muscle tissue
RSRICHMOND <@t> aol.com
RSRICHMOND <@t> aol.com
Tue Jun 20 14:48:58 CDT 2006
Sarah E. Lewis, Histotechnician at Mendell Neuromuscular Lab, Childrens
Research Center for Gene Therapy in Columbus OH notes:
>>This is the protocol we send to outside institutions... You mentioned you
wait until the 2-methylbutane / isopentane gets slushy... This we do not do. I
listen for the "boiling" sound to
stop (so to speak). Your solution should be clear, not cloudy. You will start
to see little white crystals form... This is when you put your tissue in the
2-methylbutane suspended in liquid nitrogen. A 0.5x0.5x1.0 cm piece of muscle
should be in for 30 sec. Tissue any smaller, cut your time down by 5 sec
according to size. Hold tissue in cryostat or -20/-40 until tissue is dry. Wrap
with foil and store in -80.<<
Many people cover the specimen with a thin layer of talcum powder before
dipping it int the 2-MB. Also, it helps to dip the specimen up and down at about 1
second intervals for at least 10 dips. - These strategies avoid the formation
of large ice crystals ("waffle artifact") within muscle fibers. I'd suggest
trying this with some practice muscle - from an amputated leg or a researcher's
left-over dead rat, depending on where you are - before freezing a patient
specimen - cut frozen sections to see if you have artifact.
2MB (like acetone) is a fire hazard. A few weeks ago I posted a note about
using 3M's HFE-7100 -
methyl nonafluoroisobutyl ether
C4F9-O-CH3
instead. Does anyone know about using this stuff as a non-flammable freeze
medium?
Bob Richmond
Gastonia NC
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