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Plasma and Serum Preparation

2019.4.22

实验概要

Serum is the  liquid fraction of whole blood that is collected after the blood is  allowed to clot. The clot is removed by centrifugation and the resulting  supernatant, designated serum, is carefully removed using a Pasteur  pipette. Plasma is produced when whole blood is collected in tubes that  are treated with an anticoagulant. The blood does not clot in the plasma  tube. The cells are removed by centrifugation. The supernatant,  designated plasma is carefully removed from the cell pellet using a  Pasteur pipette.

主要设备

Serum and Plasma Tubes


The commercially available serum tubes are as follows:

Red

No anticoagulant.

Red with black

Treated with gel to help to separate the clot (not evaluated).

 


The commercially available plasma tubes are as follows:

Lavendar

Treated with EDTA.

Blue

Treated with citrate.

Green

Treated with heparin.

Grey

Treated with potassium oxalate/sodium fluoride (not evaluated).

Yellow

Treated with potassium oxalate/sodium fluoride (not evaluated).

 

 

实验步骤

1. Serum Preparation

1).  Collect whole blood in a covered test tube. If commercially available  tubes are to be used, the researcher should use the red topped tubes.  These are available from Becton Dickinson (BD). BD’s trade name for the  blood handling tubes is Vacutainer. After collection of the whole blood,  allow the blood to clot by leaving it undisturbed at room temperature.  This usually takes 15-30 minutes. Remove the clot by centrifuging at  1,000-2,000 x g for 10 minutes in a refrigerated centrifuge.

2).  The resulting supernatant is designated serum. Following  centrifugation, it is important to immediately transfer the liquid  component (serum) into a clean polypropylene tube using a Pasteur  pipette. The samples should be maintained at 2-8°C while handling. If  the serum is not analyzed immediately, the serum should be apportioned  into 0.5 ml aliquots, stored, and transported at –20°C or lower. It is  important to avoid freeze-thaw cycles because this is detrimental to  many serum components. Samples which are hemolyzed, icteric or lipemic  can invalidate certain tests.

2. Plasma Preparation

1).  Collect whole blood into commercially available anticoagulant-treated  tubes e.g., EDTA-treated (lavender tops) or citrate-treated (light blue  tops). Heparinized tubes (green tops) are indicated for some  applications; however, heparin can often be contaminated with endotoxin,  which can stimulate white blood cells to release cytokines. Cells are  removed from plasma by centrifugation for 10 minutes at 1,000-2,000 x g  using a refrigerated centrifuge. Centrifugation for 15 minutes at 2,000 x  g depletes platelets in the plasma sample.

    2). The resulting supernatant is designated plasma. Following  centrifugation, it is important to immediately transfer the liquid  component (plasma) into a clean polypropylene tube using a Pasteur  pipette. The samples should be maintained at 2-8°C while handling. If  the plasma is not analyzed immediately, the plasma should be apportioned  into 0.5 ml aliquots, stored, and transported at –20°C or lower. It is  important to avoid freeze-thaw cycles. Samples which are hemolyzed,  icteric, or lipemic can invalidate certain tests. There are other  commercially available tubes for blood sample collection. Invitrogen™  has not evaluated some of these tubes for compatibility with our ELISA  kits.


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