We strongly recommend using live cells whenever possible. For certain cell types that are fragile or sensitive to concanavalin A, please refer to the protocol below to lightly fix cells prior to the CUT&Tag experiment. Please note that cell fixation does not significantly increase CUT&Tag signals. In fact, over-fixation may lead to weaker CUT&Tag signals. Refer to the description in the CUT&Tag Protocol, Section II to determine the appropriate cell number in each reaction.
NOTE: The following reagents are required for fixed cell preparation and are not included in the CUT&Tag Assay Kit #77552: 37% formaldehyde or 16% Formaldehyde Methanol-Free #12606 and Glycine Solution (10X) #7005.
! All buffer volumes should be scaled proportionally to the number of CUT&Tag reactions being performed.
Complete Wash Buffer | Volume (per cell preparation) | Volume (per reaction) | Total Volume |
---|---|---|---|
10X Wash buffer (CUT&RUN, CUT&Tag) #31415 | 200 µl | 10 µl | Add both columns together for total volume needed for each reagent. |
100X Spermidine #27287 | 20 µl | 1 µl | |
Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (200X) #7012 | 10 µl | 0.5 µl | |
Nuclease free water #12931 | 1770 µl | 88.5 µl |
NOTE: For adherent cells, detach them from the dish using Trypsin and neutralize with at least 3 volumes of tissue culture medium. We do not recommend scraping the cells from the dish to prevent cell lysis. Cells should be counted accurately using a hemocytometer or other cell counter to ensure the proper number of cells are being used for the experiment.
NOTE: If working with fewer than 100,000 total cells and the centrifuged cell pellet is not visible by eye, we do NOT recommend freezing down cell pellets. Instead, we recommend continuing on with the protocol and skipping the wash steps 5 to 7 below. After the initial centrifugation of the cell suspension in Step 4, remove most of the supernatant, leaving behind ≤40 µl cell medium per reaction. Then in Step 8 add enough Complete Wash Buffer to the cell suspension to achieve a total volume of 100 µl per reaction.
For most tissue types, 1 mg of fresh tissue is sufficient to generate robust enrichment of histones. If fresh tissue is not accessible, lightly fixed tissue (0.1% formaldehyde for 2 min) can be used. Fixed tissue samples can be frozen at -80°C up to 6 months before using. Over-fixation may lead to weaker CUT&Tag signals. The CUT&Tag assay does not work well for enrichment of transcription factors and cofactors from tissues. For analysis of transcription factors and cofactors, we recommend using the CUT&RUN Assay Kit #86652.
NOTE: The following reagents are required for fixed tissue preparation and are not included in this kit: 37% formaldehyde or 16% Formaldehyde Methanol-Free #12606, Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) #9872, and Glycine Solution (10X) #7005.
! All buffer volumes should be increased proportionally based on the number of CUT&Tag reactions being performed.
Complete Wash Buffer | Volume (per cell preparation) | Volume (per reaction) | Total Volume |
---|---|---|---|
10X Wash buffer (CUT&RUN, CUT&Tag) #31415 | 300 µl | 10 µl | Add both columns together for total volume needed for each reagent. |
100X Spermidine #27287 | 30 µl | 1 µl | |
Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (200X) #7012 | 15 µl | 0.5 µl | |
Nuclease free water #12931 | 2655 µl | 88.5 µl |
Fixation Buffer | Volume (per tissue type) |
---|---|
Formaldehyde | 2.7 µl of 37% or 6.25 µl of 16% |
Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (200X) #7012 | 5 µl |
Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) #9872 | 992.3 µl |
Fixation Wash Buffer | Volume (per tissue type) |
---|---|
Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (200X) #7012 | 5 µl |
Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) #9872 | 995 µl |
NOTE: This volume of fixation solution is sufficient for up to 50 mg of tissue. If processing >50 mg, scale up the amount of Fixation Buffer used in Step 3 and Fixation Wash Buffer used in Step 7 accordingly.
In the CUT&Tag protocol, the addition of digitonin to the buffers facilitates the permeabilization of cell membranes and entry of the primary antibody, secondary antibody, and pAG-Tn5 enzyme into the cells and nuclei. Therefore, having an adequate amount of digitonin in the buffers is critical to the success of antibody and enzyme binding, and digestion of targeted genomic loci. Different cell lines exhibit varying sensitivities to digitonin cell permeabilization. While the amount of digitonin recommended in this protocol should be sufficient for permeabilization of most cell lines or tissues, you can test your specific cell line or tissue using this protocol. We have found that the addition of excess digitonin is not deleterious to the assay, so there is no need to perform a concentration curve. Rather, a quick test to determine if the recommended amount of digitonin works for your cell line is sufficient.
1X Wash Buffer | Volume (per reaction) |
---|---|
10X Wash Buffer (CUT&RUN, CUT&Tag) #31415 | 10 µl |
Nuclease-free Water #12931 | 90 µl |
Problem | Possible Causes | Recommendation |
---|---|---|
1. Concanavalin A beads clump during the experiment. | Some bead clumping is normal and is not usually deleterious to the assay. | Resuspend clumped beads by gently pipetting up and down. Resting tubes on a tube rack instead of rocking or rotating sample tubes may help to minimize beads clumping and drying on tube walls. |
Room temperature incubation of beads and cells is too long. | Activate Concanavalin A beads at 4°C and incubate with cells no longer than 5 min (CUT&Tag Protocol Section III, Step 2). | |
Cells are lysing during preparation. | Be sure to prepare live cells at room temperature and as quickly as possible to minimize cell stress (CUT&Tag Protocol Section II). | |
Digitonin concentration may be too high. | Some cells may be more sensitive to digitonin and lyse at higher concentrations. Reduce the amount of digitonin to a sufficient level for cell permeabilization (see CUT&Tag Protocol APPENDIX A). | |
2. Low yield, low sequencing depth, or no signal in NG-seq analysis. | Cell count is inaccurate, cells are lost or lysing during preparation. | Starting cell culture should be 60-90% confluent and look healthy (> 90% live cells). Make sure to get an accurate cell count using an automated cell counter or hemocytometer. |
Do not treat cells with trypsin for longer than necessary, as this may interfere with ConA bead binding. | ||
Be sure to prepare cells at room temperature and as quickly as possible to minimize cell stress. | ||
Perform initial cell wash steps in one vial to minimize cell loss (CUT&Tag Protocol Section II). | ||
Cells are over-fixed. | We recommend using live cells or fresh tissues for CUT&Tag assay whenever possible. If live cells or fresh tissues are not available, then we recommend lightly fixing the cells/tissues for 2 minutes in 0.1% formaldehyde. Over-fixation can lead to inhibition of the tagmentation reaction and loss of signal. | |
Too few cells are used. | Use 100,000 cells per reaction whenever possible. Histone modifications may work with as few as 5,000 cells and transcription factors and cofactors may work with as few as 20,000 cells. However, the number of cells required to get good enrichment is highly dependent on the abundance of the target protein and avidity of the antibody. If no enrichment is seen when using fewer than 100,000 cells, then increase the number of cells per reaction. Use 100,000 cells per reaction whenever possible. | |
If starting with low cell number, too much cell media is in the reaction for Concanavalin A beads binding. | During Concanavalin A Bead binding, having greater than 40% of cell culture media in the reaction reduces cell binding with beads and results in cell loss. Spin cell suspension to remove medium so that less than 40 µl per reaction is left. Then add Complete Wash Buffer to a total of 100 µl reaction for optimal Concanavalin A Beads binding. | |
Tissue samples are not completely disaggregated. | Disaggregate tissue samples into single cell suspension, where no tissue chunks are observed. For fibrous tissue types that are difficult to be completely disaggregate, use more starting amount of tissue to compensate for the cell loss during tissue disaggregation. | |
Digitonin is not effectively permeabilizing the cells. | Ensure Digitonin Solution #16359 is completely thawed and in solution before use. Occasionally digitonin crashes out of solution after placed on ice for hours. | |
Be sure to test and confirm that the amount of digitonin used is sufficient to permeabilize your specific cell line (see CUT&Tag Protocol APPENDIX C). | ||
Place Digitonin Solution #16359 on ice when using and store it at -20°C when finished for the day. The Digitonin Solution must be stored at -20°C when not in use. | ||
pAG-Tn5 enzyme is not working properly in the assay. | The shelf life of pAG-Tn5 is 6 months. Do not use expired pAG-Tn5. | |
The pAG-Tn5 requires Mg2+ divalent cations for activity. Be sure to add appropriate amount of magnesium chloride in the Tagmentation Buffer for enzyme activation (CUT&Tag Protocol Section V, Step 12). | ||
Be sure to add enough pAG-Tn5 (2 µl) to each CUT&Tag reaction and incubate at 37°C for 1 hr to allow sufficient tagmentation of chromatin (CUT&Tag Protocol Section V, Step 13). | ||
Antibody does not work in the CUT&Tag assay. | Not all antibodies work in CUT&Tag, especially antibodies against non-histone targets. If possible, use CUT&Tag validated antibodies. | |
Be sure to include Tri-Methyl-Histone H3 (Lys4) (C42D8) Rabbit mAb #9751 as a positive control to confirm the overall experiment worked. | ||
Not enough PCR cycles used during library preparation. | Depending on starting cell numbers per reaction, use 13-16 PCR cycles to amplify tagmented DNA. Please refer to the protocol for CUT&Tag Dual Index Primers and PCR Master Mix for Illumina #47415. | |
3. NG-seq exhibits signal in unpredicted genome regions. | Non-specific pAG-Tn5 tagmentation occurs across the genome. | Do not over-dilute the 10X High Salt Digitonin Buffer used during the tagmentation reaction (CUT&Tag Protocol Section V, Step 12). The high salt concentration is critical to preventing non-specific binding of pAG-Tn5 to open chromatin regions. |
Use CUT&Tag validated antibodies to guide pAG-Tn5 to specific gene loci. | ||
Do not use an excessive starting amount of cells or tissues in one reaction. | ||
Non-specific pAG-Tn5 binding leads to increased enrichment of open chromatin, as seen with ATAC-seq assays. The positive control Tri-Methyl-Histone H3 (Lys4) (C42D8) Rabbit mAb #9751, which enriches for open and active gene promoters, shows significant overlap with ATAC-seq enrichment. Comparison of the target-specific antibody enrichment with that of the tri-methyl-histone H3 antibody can be used to determine the extent of non-specific pAG-Tn5 binding and tagmentation. |
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CUT&Tag provided under a license from Active Motif, Inc. under U.S. Patent No. 10,689,643 and 9,938,524, foreign equivalents, and child patents deriving therefrom. For purchaser's internal research use only. May not be used for resale, services, or other commercial use.
U.S. Patent No. 11,733,248, foreign equivalents, and child patents deriving therefrom.
U.S. Patent No. 7,429,487, foreign equivalents, and child patents deriving therefrom.