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JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments
Encyclopedia of Experiments: Cancer Research

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

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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.

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