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  • qubit and picogreen discrepancies

    We're a small lab that has done most of our quantitation using nanodrop and qubit, depending on the application. However, as we try to prepare multiplexed illumina libraries for dsDNA, we're trying to get a picogreen up and running. After some tech support help we were able to get a beautiful standard curve that seemed to be working well. But then we decided to double check our samples using the qubit, and found some very significant discrepancies. Some samples had similar readings on both machines, others would be tens of ng lower on the qubit, and yet others would be tens of nanograms higher on the qubit. So the concentration readings aren't consistently off in one direction or the other.

    We double checked the raw qubit standards and 2 sets of raw picogreen standards on the nanodrop, and all the readings were 92 ng/ul give or take a ng, so the standards seem to be consistent, and we're assuming the nanodrop is just underestimating them slightly. But when we tried qubiting the pico standard, it was about 86 ng/ul. When we tried replicating samples on the picogreen with the same standards, the values were sometimes significantly different.

    We're trying our best to ensure that all samples and standards are incubated to the same temperature for the same amount of time. We also do our best to minimize light exposure, even going so far as to pipette into the picogreen plates with the lights off and only a little ambient light coming in through closed shades

    Any thoughts or suggestions on what we might be doing wrong or things we could try would be appreciated. Thanks.

  • #2
    Some possible causes:

    1- variation in pipetting and pipette being out of calibration
    2- using low sample volume. For comparisons it is better to use minimum 3ul sample or the standard with two replicates
    3- using unsuitable Qubit reagent and buffer, best practice would be using sample with concentration around 10 ng/ul with HS reagents

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    • #3
      Remember quibit is a single point calibration (with blank-s1 0ng, s2 10ng). So the further you are from 10ng/ul the worse the quantification will be. Are you doing replicates with your picogreen? (you can do 25ul diluted dye, 25ul diluted DNA in 384 well plates to minimize costs and allow you to do replicates)

      The nanodrop is going to be way off, don't worry about the numbers it comes up with.
      Microbial ecologist, running a sequencing core. I have lots of strong opinions on how to survey communities, pretty sure some are even correct.

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      • #4
        Thanks for the input. Based on input here and experimenting in the lab, it looks like we'll be incorporating replication into our Picogreen protocol to ensure good consistency.

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