Although COVID-19 is delaying many aspects of academic research, the TSC Alliance can help you prepare to launch your research forward as soon as this public health crisis has passed. We can review and approve your applications for biosample use in advance so samples may be shipped as soon as is permissible by your institution.
Are you looking for samples from TSC patients to use in your lab? The TSC Biosample Repository has a growing collection of samples tied to phenotypic data. In most cases, we can ship these samples at no charge to the investigator.
To date, we have shipped 808 samples for use in diverse projects, ranging from quantification of sphingolipids in plasma to investigating mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmy.
As of August 1, 2020, the TSC Biosample Repository has collected:
- 356 buccal cell samples for DNA isolation
- 331 blood samples from which plasma and white blood cells have been isolated
- 16 tissue samples
- 4 brain (2 with matched formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded sample)
- 3 kidney (2 with matched FFPE sample)
- 5 soft tissue (3 with matched FFPE sample)
- 1 liver (1 with matched FFPE sample)
- 1 heart
- 1 eye
- 1 tooth
- 332 blood samples from TSC Clinical Research Consortium projects, some of which may be available via application to the projects’ Biosample Use Committee
Because biosamples are linked to data in the Natural History Database, applicants may request subsets of biosamples based on clinical phenotypes, age, sex, etc., to compare, for example, samples from individuals with TSC who developed angiomyolipomas at different ages or not at all. Additional data from the Natural History Database relevant to the project may be requested for each sample, as well.
In addition to patient samples, we also have a license to distribute the TSC1- and TSC2-knockout HEK293T cell lines from the Nellist laboratory at Erasmus MC to researchers in the Americas.
If you would like to request biosamples, please follow the instructions on our Biosample Repository page. We encourage you to discuss your project’s goals and biosample needs with Jo Anne Nakagawa prior to starting the application.