Lysis Protocol
Cannabis Leaf Homogenization Using the Bullet Blender
RS18-0238B.ACAN
Materials
- Bullet Blender® for 1.5/2 mL tubes using 5 mL adapters
- Homogenization Buffer
- FoamBlocker (Optional)
-
Lysis Kit or
Lysis Beads
- GREEN or NAVY Lysis Kit (from PrecisionPak™ or purchased separately)
- 1.4 mm blend + 3.2 mm Stainless Steel Beads in Eppendorf, GATOR, or RINO tubes
- Sample — up to 300 mg
Lysis Kit and Bead Choices | Sample Volume | Bead Volume | Buffer Volume |
---|---|---|---|
GREEN | Up to 100 mg | Pre-filled | 200 - 300 µL |
NAVY | 100 - 300 mg | Pre-filled | 300 - 600 µL |
1.4 mm blend + 3.2 mm Stainless Steel Beads | Up to 300 mg | 100 - 200 µL | 200 - 600 µL |
Procedure
- Use the pre-filled bead lysis kit tubes OR prepare a tube with the recommended volume of bead choices from the table above.
- Add the appropriate volume of buffer according to the table above
- Prepare the sample by cutting it into small thin pieces and then transfer it into the buffer-filled tubes.
- (Optional) To avoid excess foaming, add FoamBlocker up to 1-2% of the total volume of the homogenization buffer.
- Close the tubes tightly and place into the Bullet Blender sample chamber. If using the Gold or Gold+ models, pre-cool the chamber before adding sample tubes.
-
Set the controls to
speed 16, time 5 minutes
then press Start.
- After the run, remove the tubes from the instrument and visually inspect the samples. If homogenization is incomplete, homogenize for an additional 30 seconds, or repeat the homogenization step with a higher speed.
- Using a pipette, transfer the homogenized samples into new tubes.
- Proceed with downstream application.
Notes
This protocol does not specify a particular buffer – choose a buffer that is most appropriate for the downstream application or use the lysis buffer provided in a PrecisionPak™, a simplified workflow solution which also includes a bead lysis kit, supplemental reagents for high quality nucleic acids isolations, and an optimized protocol for specific samples.
The provided homogenization conditions serve as a general guideline. Homogenization times, speeds, or beads may need to be optimized based on sample characteristics and desired outcomes.