Cause | Solution |
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Blood drawn >24 hours prior to separation | Use blood drawn from 2–6 hours prior to separation. Blood drawn >24 hours will be more difficult to separate, and percent recovery and viability will be lower. |
Blood has coagulated due to absence of anticoagulant | Use of vacuum tubes with premeasured amounts of anticoagulant is suggested. Use of a syringe (without anticoagulant) is not recommended. |
Blood has coagulated due to incomplete mixing | Ensure vacuum tubes with anticoagulant are mixed well after blood draw. |
Anticoagulant used is not suitable for use in Histopaque separation application | The following anticoagulants are suitable for use with Histopaque:
• 15–30 units heparin per mL whole blood
• 1.25–1.75 mg EDTA per mL whole blood
ACA-A (Acid Citrate Dextrose formula A) may be used as an anticoagulant. After separation, the mononuclear cell band produced will be wider than for other anticoagulants. This is normal and the cells are acceptable for use. |
Blood sample is too warm and separation attempted too soon after blood draw | Red blood cell contamination may be a result of blood not being at room temperature.
After drawing, the blood should be allowed to cool at room temperature for minimum 30-45 minutes. If used immediately after being drawn, the number of mononuclear cells collected will be low. Separation procedures are optimal when both blood and Histopaque are at 18–20 °C, with an acceptable temperature range of 18–26 °C. |
Blood sample diluted with high salt concentration PBS | The historic cell separation technique used with Histopaque includes dilution of the blood with PBS (1:1). Subsequently, we have found not all PBS formulations are suitable for use with Histopaque.
Solutions containing 150 mM phosphate buffer and 150 mM sodium chloride are PBS solutions with salt concentrations too high for use with Histopaque. PBS molarities closer to 10 mM phosphate are more suitable for use with Histopaque. Cell viability will remain higher when high salt concentration PBS is replaced by a suitable cell culture media. |
Differences in donor blood physiology (when single sample has poorer recovery) | High lipid levels, rheumatoid factor, anemia, and drug treatment are all possible causes for poor separation of a specific donor’s blood.
If the plasma is not clear, this is an indication of high lipid levels. |
Contamination of small animal sample with other fluids or solids | Blood obtained from a non-needle bleed, e.g., through tail sampling, is often unacceptable for use due to the presence of hairs and other body fluids in the collected blood. This often results in the coagulation cascade being initiated, producing clotting.
Recommend the animal be sacrificed and the blood obtained through either the aorta or vena cava or other large blood vessel. Alternatively, a pediatric vacuum tube may be used for drawing blood. |
Occlusion of white blood cells in samples with high levels of white cells | Aggregates may form when red cells come in contact with the polysucrose, resulting in occlusion of white blood cells. Once trapped in these aggregates, the white blood cells will travel to the bottom of the centrifuge tube.
For routine blood specimens, percent recovery will often be higher for undiluted blood. However, bone marrow, umbilical cord blood, and samples from donors with abnormally high white cell counts should be diluted to reduce the size of the red cell aggregates and improve recovery of white cells. |
Improper dilution of blood or dilution with contaminated PBS or media | When blood is diluted prior to loading on the Histopaque®, there is a chance either the buffer or media formulation is incompatible with Histopaque, or that the PBS or cell culture media is contaminated.
If the blood has been diluted and yields are poor, repeat experiment without sample dilution. |
Dilution using cell culture media containing FBS or other carrier protein | Cell culture media without FBS can be substituted for PBS when diluting samples for use with Histopaque. If the blood is diluted with cell culture media containing FBS, the number of cells recovered will be lower.
FBS may be added to the culture media for subsequent washing or storage after the cells have been separated and washed at least once to remove the Histopaque. After the first wash, adding protein such as FBS to the wash media will further protect the cells from damage. |
Isolating cells from buffy coats using Histopaque | A buffy coat is prepared by collecting blood in a suitable anticoagulant and centrifuging. Red cells will pellet to the bottom of the tube. Directly on top of the red cell layer will be a gray layer. This gray layer is the buffy coat and represents all the white blood cells in the blood. Above the gray layer will be the plasma.
Buffy coats prepared from fresh blood are suitable for separation using Histopaque. If the cells are several days old, e.g., if the buffy coats are obtained from donated units of blood, cells may not provide acceptable yields.
Buffy coats must be diluted a minimum of 1:2 or 1:4 before being loaded onto the Histopaque gradient. |
Isolating cells from buffy coats using ACCUSPIN™ tubes | Buffy coat preparations cannot be used in ACCUSPIN tubes. The ACCUSPIN tubes require a certain quantity of red blood cells to work properly, and buffy coats lack sufficient red blood cells for use in ACCUSPIN tubes. |