- July 29, 2025 at 7:55 am #45959
Hey everyone! I’ve been struggling lately with RNA extraction from some really fibrous tissue samples – mainly cardiac and skeletal muscle. No matter how careful I am, I keep ending up with degraded RNA or extremely low yields. I’ve tried Trizol and even switched to a column-based kit, but the quality still isn’t great. Anyone had better luck with tougher tissues like this? Would really appreciate any tips or methods that worked for you!
- July 29, 2025 at 7:56 am #45960
Oh yes, been there! Muscle and connective tissues can be a real pain because of the high protein and fibrous content. I had similar issues with pig heart tissue and finally managed to improve both yield and integrity by doing a double homogenization – first mechanical (what is chromatography), then passing it through a QIAshredder before lysis.
Another trick that helped was adding β-mercaptoethanol fresh every time and keeping everything chilled, even during centrifugation steps.
Also, I realized that the kits matter a lot — I’ve recently switched to some reagents from Gentaur after a colleague recommended them, and their RNeasy-compatible buffers seem to handle tough samples better. Not a miracle, but I’ve noticed my 260/280 and 260/230 ratios have improved since the switch.
Might be worth a try! - July 29, 2025 at 7:57 am #45961
I’ve mostly worked with liver and spleen samples (so not as tough), but even there I noticed huge differences based on the type of homogenizer and timing between thawing and processing. Definitely agree about the β-mercaptoethanol and cold temps – those two alone saved many of my samples from being completely useless.
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