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  • LCL vs whole blood samples? (shearing differences)

    Dear all,
    I sheared lymphoblastoid cell line (LCL) samples and whole blood samples by covaris S2. Then, I ran bioanalyzer to check their length.
    Interestingly, unlike whole blood samples that showed typical graph after covaris shearing, sheared LCL samples looked different
    First, a bit wider than whole blood samples
    Second, low fluorescent unit -> I measured conc' again with nanodrop but same as whole blood.
    Third, their graph started from little bit higher than baseline.



    I assumed that fragmentation of episome is a reason why a bunch of small fragments are. But I cannot understand low concentration and wider distribution.
    Attached Files

  • #2
    What is the downstream application? Looks like the LCL sample concentration was lower than expected, so although the same covaris profile was used the two samples run on the bioanalyzer much differently.

    Also, if you are sequencing be aware LCL samples have a high number of SNP artifacts from transformation.
    Last edited by upenn_ngs; 09-20-2010, 07:28 AM.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by upenn_ngs View Post
      What is the downstream application? Looks like the LCL sample concentration was lower than expected, so although the same covaris profile was used the two samples run on the bioanalyzer much differently.

      Also, if you are sequencing be aware LCL samples have a high number of SNP artifacts from transformation.
      I used same protocols, including time, intensity, and volume, and application (covaris S2). Also, I ran bioa' with other samples in same condition.

      These LCL samples are transformed by EBV. I haven't found any papers that EBV change the host genome. If you know any papers for EBV integration, could you cite them on here?

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      • #4
        Good question-- I presume the variability is due to a single cell, or subset of cells taking over the culture during transformation, and additional mutations during division. For whole exome resequencing, we have seen 10,000-30,000 more SNPs pass filter in LCL samples vs. blood.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by upenn_ngs View Post
          Good question-- I presume the variability is due to a single cell, or subset of cells taking over the culture during transformation, and additional mutations during division. For whole exome resequencing, we have seen 10,000-30,000 more SNPs pass filter in LCL samples vs. blood.
          Yes, we used two LCL samples, which of one has been cultured for a long time. We are also expecting EBV-transformed one has some SNPs but I'm just wonder why it was shown broader. Maybe LCL-transformed cell's genome might have become fragile cause of virus integration (consistently it would take more CNV I think).

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          • #6
            Hi Sehrrot,

            I think the diffrences you are noticing are simply due to concentration differences of the samples. I think it is essential not only to carry out a nanodrop analysis, but also a Qbit or similar picogreen analysis for concentration. My guess is that if you run a Qbit analysis you will notice that the concentration of the two samples will be different unlike the uv/vis analysis on the nanodrop.
            what settings, volume, buffer type, and tube type are you using for the fragmentation?

            Thank you

            Hamid

            Comment


            • #7
              Hi Hamid,

              Thank you for your reply.
              I did QBit, nanodrop and Epoch and also did 5 different concentration in bioa' analysis.
              Even Qbit gave more accurate results, all three method showed almost same result.

              But my question is why LCL transformed sample showed little bit higher start region (10bp~80bp) and why LCL transformed samples generally showed lower concentration than whole blood sample.

              We used recommended covaris setting with various setting, including 100, 120 ul, 130 ul shearing and TE buffer, MiliQ water shearing.

              Comment


              • #8
                your lcl samples fragmented to much smaller sizes, and you lost a lott of those during cleanup?

                Comment

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