Amos, I have had the same problem in the past, and posted my issues on the Histonet, however no one was able to help me out. At one point I even exchanged Histogel with a colleage severl hundred miles away, thinking that maybe I had a bad lot of Histogel. She did not have a problem with my Histogel and neither did I with her Histogel. The shrinking was arbitrary. At times all of them look great and other times more than half shrunk and looked brittle. Even RA/Thermo did not have an answer for me. I decided to do an experiment. To not bore everyone on the Histonet and explain all of my experimental steps, what it boiled down to is that you need a long processing program on the processor. We use a VIP processor as well, and the processing program is at least 12 hours long. NO MORE PROBLEMS.
Since I started using this progrem, every single Histogel block has been perfect. Let me know if you need any further info or explanation. Dusko Trajkovic HT ASCP Pfizer Inc. La Jolla ________________________________ From: Amos Brooks <amosbro...@gmail.com> To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu Sent: Fri, June 24, 2011 10:29:09 AM Subject: [Histonet] Histogel Problem Hi, I have a problem with some blocks that were prepared with Histogel. I was hoping someone else might have had a similar problem and figured it out. I took a photo of the blocks that were mads and put them in a Picassa album here: https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/APO3HsIMa2_jPOEs3QRGUjhz3qi22FNPb2i5JJnBCAk?feat=directlink The long & short of it is that the blocs were prepared by the researcher for me to process. They are mouse kidneys. Now it is entirely possible for him to have goofed something up in preparing the Histogel blocks. I wasn't there when he did it, but when I looked at them before processing, they all looked fine. (Like the adjacent good one in the photo). When they were processed they were placed in the VIP right next to each other. When I went to embed them this morning all but one of the four looked fine. The one that didn't come out well looked like the Histogel had shrunk up and shriveled around the kidneys. I am sure this will be aweful to cut, and the researcher is going to have a bird over it since this happened with another project previously. I would like to have a decent explanation for him, so if anyone knows what might have happened and has suggestions I would love to hear it (yes vendors too are welcome to answer this of course!). By the way, this was processed on a rather short cycle of 15-20 min per station of graded ETOH from 70% to 100% with 3 xylene stations and 4 paraffin stations (45 min for these). It seems fine for everything else that was on the processor. Just that one Histogel block was the issue. Thank you, Amos _______________________________________________ Histonet mailing list Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet _______________________________________________ Histonet mailing list Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet