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April 2009

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From:
Cameron Nowell <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Confocal Microscopy List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 24 Apr 2009 22:55:09 +1000
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Afer cracking an ampuole i decant it into a 15/10ml tube, date it and store it in the fridge. After two weeks i throw it out.
 
 
Cheers
 
Cam
 
 

________________________________

From: Confocal Microscopy List on behalf of David Knecht
Sent: Fri 24/04/2009 10:50 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: GFP tissue preparation for confocal microscopy


How long do you store the ampule formaldehyde after cracking open the vial?  What temp do you store it at?  Dave 

On Apr 24, 2009, at 4:25 AM, Sylvie Le Guyader wrote:


	I totally agree with Steve: only bad PFA kills GFP. I have done a fair bit of imaging GFP in filopodia which retracts very fast if not fixed properly.
	
	My understanding is that paraformaldehyde is a polymer of formaldehyde and is solid. Formaldehyde is a gas that readily dissolves in water.
	In a formaldehyde solution, two things happen:
	- Formaldehyde equilibrates between the air above the solution and the solution itself so every time you open your bottle, more formaldehyde leaves the solution. Thus 15mL tubes are a good way to store working stocks because the volume/surface ratio limits this process.
	- The second thing that happens is that paraformaldehyde forms as a precipitate which is definitely a sign that your solution needs to be trashed (not down the sink of course!). Thus I think it is not a good idea to buy '4%PFA' in big bottles as it is usually sold except maybe if you use it very fast or if you have applications where the quality of fixation is not critical.
	
	I prepare an 8% stock the following way:
	Under a fume hood, warm up 150mL of PBS to about 60ºC
	Add 16g of PFA powder
	Stir and keep warm to dissolve
	Adjust the pH to 7.4 with concentrate NaOH (you should then obtain a clear solution)
	Adjust the volume to 200mL with PBS
	Aliquote in 10 mL in 15mL falcon tubes
	Store the aliquots for up to several years (currently using a 2 years old stock) at -20º
	The working stock can be stored at 4ºC for a couple of months at the most
	I normally pre warm the amount of solution I need to 37ºC and keep the rest in the fridge
	I add the warm 2x solution directly onto my cells covered in the same volume of their own overnight medium (or changed at least 30 min before sot that the cells are very happy:))
	5 min at 37ºC for a single layer culture is plenty
	Mount and image within 24h as the autofluorescence will quickly show up against your signal. You can image later but your signal to noise ratio will worsen with time.
	I find this method excellent for preserving filopodia. It's also trouble free since there is no rinsing the cells or making fresh solution every day.
	
	Good luck!
	
	Med vänlig hälsning / Best regards
	
	Sylvie
	
	@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
	Sylvie Le Guyader
	Dept of Biosciences and Nutrition
	Karolinska Institutet
	Novum
	14157 Huddinge
	Sweden
	+46 (0)8 608 9240
	________________________________
	From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Stephen Bunnell
	Sent: 23 April 2009 17:20
	To: [log in to unmask]
	Subject: Re: GFP tissue preparation for confocal microscopy
	
	PFA does not kill GFP fluorescence.
	
	BAD PFA kills GFP fluorescence.
	
	We routinely use 1% PFA with GFP, YFP, and CFP, and have never had a problem so long as the PFA is fresh and pH'ed to between 7.0 and 7.4.
	
	   -Steve
	
	
	
	On 4/22/09 10:34 PM, "Young Jik Kwon" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
	All,
	
	We are trying to take confocal micrographs of at tumor tissues that express GFP. What would be the sample preparation procedures? We tried cryosectioned samples but the cell morphology seems weird. We already know paraformaldehyde fixation kills GFP fluorescence. Any expert's advice?
	
	Best,
	
	Young
	
	
	
	
	****************************************************************************
	Stephen C. Bunnell, Ph.D.
	Assistant Professor
	Tufts University Medical School
	Department of Pathology
	Jaharis Bldg., Room 512
	150 Harrison Ave.
	Boston, MA 02111
	
	Phone: (617) 636-2174
	Fax:   (617) 636-2990
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	SHIPPING ADDRESS (for packages):
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Dr. David Knecht    
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology
Co-head Flow Cytometry and Confocal Microscopy Facility
U-3125
91 N. Eagleville Rd.
University of Connecticut
Storrs, CT 06269
860-486-2200
860-486-4331 (fax)

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