On Monday, 8 December 2014 18:01:33 UTC, SC wrote:
on that point, any particular reason why not? at approximately 10 picogram per mammalian cell, there is certainly enough of it. (And given that probing for viral RNA is used in screening donor organ tissue, which would be at much lower overall concentrations in cell lysates).
Certainly at -80, useful data can be retrieved from tissue or lysates after years.
-- ".....I'm not sure intact RNA can be retrived from a cadaver."
on that point, any particular reason why not? at approximately 10 picogram per mammalian cell, there is certainly enough of it. (And given that probing for viral RNA is used in screening donor organ tissue, which would be at much lower overall concentrations in cell lysates).
Certainly at -80, useful data can be retrieved from tissue or lysates after years.
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