Freeze drying biological specimen preservation
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Conditions of preserving DNA, RNA and protein in pathological specimens
are of great importance as degradation of such macromolecules would
critically affect results of molecular biological analysis. The
feasibility of freeze-drying as a means of preserving pathological
tissue samples for molecular analysis has previously been shown. In the
present study, further tests on long-term storage conditions and
analyses of freeze-dried samples by polymerase chain reaction (PCR),
reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR, western blotting and
immunohistochemistry are reported. Rat chromosomal DNA of freeze-dried
samples stored for 4 years showed slight degradation while RNA
degradation was more prominently seen at an earlier stage of storage.
However, these 4 year DNA and RNA samples were still able to serve as a
template for some PCR and RT-PCR analyses, respectively. Overexpression
of c-erbB-2 and p53 protein was demonstrated by western blotting and
immunohistochemical staining using freeze-dried human breast cancer
tissues. Although macromolecules in freeze-dried samples degrade to some
extent during the preservation period, they should still be of value
for certain molecular biological analyses and morphological examination;
hence, providing more convenient and inexpensive ways of pathological
tissue storage
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