Ovary tissue not breaking down during enzymatic dissociation step |
Enzymatic failure |
Ensure reagents stored and used correctly, that solution is completely combined and that the total quantity of tissue is ≤20 mg |
Tissue rigidity |
Older ovaries are more fibrous and may require more forceful mechanical agitation when pipetting puncture/tearing with a needle while in the dissociation solution. Additionally, an extra 15-min incubation in dissociation solution for a total 75 min may suffice |
Cells adhering to plate after trypsinisation and wash |
Insufficient digestion |
Check cells before and after 5-minute incubation with trypsin to ensure they have lifted from the plate. Incubate for a further minute if required. Additionally, tapping plate firmly against a solid surface and pipetting directly onto the plate with force may dislodge any rounded cells remaining on the bottom of the plate |
Loss of cell viability after overnight culture |
Insufficient nutrients |
Ensure ovary culture media is kept at 4°C when not in use, and always heated to 37°C before use. Doubling the proportion of FCS in media to 10% may also increase viability |
Overcrowding on plate |
Dilute cell suspension before plating and seed multiple plates, or switch seeding cells in a flask (T25 or T75) |
Small/no pellet after collection |
Cell loss |
Ensure pipette tips and serological pipettes are all coated with Hank’s solution before coming into contact with cells. When not in use, store Hank’s solution at 4°C, equilibrate to room temp before use, and do not use following storage exceeding 2 weeks |