Discussion
5 years ago
Aaron Stege
2I used a serum/plasma kit for my serum samples. After the phase separation the samples should have 3 phases: a colourless aqueous phase, a white interphase and a red organic phase. However, in some of my samples there was no aqueous phase unless I wait for an extended period of time. How can I circumvent this problem?
Experiment: RNA isolation / purification Tissue - mouse brain tissue
Top comment
The first thing you can try is to attempt phase separation in room temperature instead of 4°C. After using phenolic compounds and chloroform the RNAses won’t be active so there is no risk of degradation. After adding the chloroform you can also let the samples sit for 10 min at RT, vortex them and finally centrifuge them at around 4000-6000 rpm. You can also add isoamyalkohol (IAA) to the chloroform in a ratio of 1:24 (IAA/chloroform) which might improve the success rate for separation.
Answered 5 years ago
Dr. Diana Rosentul
2 Comments
you should see two layers - an upper chloroform layer and an aqueous lower layer - assume precipitated material in the middle. With lysis/chloroform addition, you certainly should have seen both layers. Suppose it's possible that excessive mixing might have effected an emulsion but hard to see that as stable. Suggest you call the Qiagen folks for help.
Answered 4 years ago
Noah Nolan
The first thing you can try is to attempt phase separation in room temperature instead of 4°C. After using phenolic compounds and chloroform the RNAses won’t be active so there is no risk of degradation. After adding the chloroform you can also let the samples sit for 10 min at RT, vortex them and finally centrifuge them at around 4000-6000 rpm. You can also add isoamyalkohol (IAA) to the chloroform in a ratio of 1:24 (IAA/chloroform) which might improve the success rate for separation.
Answered 5 years ago
Dr. Diana Rosentul
Can you help?