Has anyone had trouble shearing formaldehyde crosslinked chromatin to small enough fragments to go into Illumina library prep? Our protocol calls for shearing to 200-300 bp fragments after crosslinking but it seems that we can't breakup the chromatin to anything less the ~800 bp by Bioanalyzer. We have tried traditional sonicator and Covaris. What are we doing wrong?
Unconfigured Ad
Collapse
X
-
Hi,
I wonder which protocol you used to shear chromatin using Covaris? I have attached our two updated protocols. One is for using SDS based buffers, and one is for using non-ionic detergent based buffers. Please prepare your samples according to one of the protocols, and let me know how it works for you.
Thank you
Hamid
-
-
Hi,
The new SDS-based buffer protocol works just as well now, so you are welcome to try either protocol. My suggestion would be to use a sample volume of 500ul in the TC12 tubes.
What is the cell type, and cell number you are using in this experiment?
Thank you
Hamid
Comment
-
-
To me it sounds like you've overcrosslinked your chromatin. What is your crosslink strategy?
Also, I know with the bioruptor the tube choice makes a difference. Some tubes barely let any of the sonic energy through the tube wall. The TPX tubes from diagenode so far are the best. Since the TPX plastic is used in high sound frequency applications so it makes sense that it is the best.
Comment
-
-
hmmm. Interesting. We crosslink (thymocytes) at 1x10^6 cell/mL in 1% formaldehyde for 10 min in a 37 degree air incubator with rotation. Then quench with 0.125M glycine for 10 min on ice.
Your conditions seem mild enough. But I can't help but think they are somehow overcrosslinked. Have your conditions worked in the past and give you a more reasonable 300bp avg frag size?
Comment
-
Latest Articles
Collapse
-
by SEQadmin2
Data variability is still an issue in sequencing technologies despite the advances in reproducibility and accuracy of these platforms. But the problem does not originate in the sequencing itself, but in the previous steps, before the sample reaches the sequencer.
The first step is collection, followed by preservation and sample preparation for analysis. Most scientists overlook those steps, but not being careful might just be skewing the experiment’s results.
...-
Channel: Articles
06-02-2026, 10:05 AM -
-
by SEQadmin2
With the launch of new single-cell sequencing platforms in 2026, the field stands at an exciting inflection point. This article surveys the most impactful advances in the field and discusses how they’re reshaping research in cancer, immunology, and beyond.
Introduction
Single-cell sequencing technologies have undergone remarkable advances over the past decade, transitioning from low-throughput experimental approaches to highly scalable platforms capable of...-
Channel: Articles
05-22-2026, 06:42 AM -
ad_right_rmr
Collapse
News
Collapse
| Topics | Statistics | Last Post | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Started by SEQadmin2, Today, 10:09 AM
|
0 responses
9 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by SEQadmin2
Today, 10:09 AM
|
||
|
Started by SEQadmin2, Yesterday, 08:59 AM
|
0 responses
16 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by SEQadmin2
Yesterday, 08:59 AM
|
||
|
Started by SEQadmin2, 06-02-2026, 12:03 PM
|
0 responses
24 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by SEQadmin2
06-02-2026, 12:03 PM
|
||
|
Started by SEQadmin2, 06-02-2026, 11:40 AM
|
0 responses
21 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by SEQadmin2
06-02-2026, 11:40 AM
|
Comment