Very cool, and I've had brilliant results from it. The hardest part is only really optimising the laser parameters, as it has to be strong enough to melt the film, but not so strong that it burns a hole in your tissue. However, it seemed that the laser just didn't want to play on Saturday. That or it was too eager. It jostled between not melting the film, only making dents in the surface (see top image) or burning a black hole in the middle of the target point. As the RNA in the tissue section only remains intact for an hour or so after wax deparaffinization, by the time I had the laser optimised there was no time to capture the cells I wanted.
Not yet defeated by this failure, I prepared a second section, and set about re-optimising the laser for this sample (you have to re-set everything each time you change samples). Again it wasn't playing. My cap looked like it'd been used for target practice.
In the end I gave up. It was only when I was removing my caps from the machine and complaining to a friend that he noticed a dust-hair on the surface of the cap. Those very fine ones that float about. But it was enough to prevent the cap from sitting flush against the tissue surface - hence my problems with the laser. Sigh. At least now I know, so I'll be cleaning the cap holder very well before using it in the future.
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ok ok. the part where you said 'the idea was very simple'.... i didn't get the rest of it.
aaarrghh
basically you use a laser beam to melt some plastic onto your cells. Then you let it reset, lift off the plastic, and your cells should be stuck to it.
If the laser isn't hot enough, the plastic doesn't melt, so no sticking.
If the laser is too hot it burns a hole in your cells.
better?
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