Introduction
Red blood cell (RBC) removal is a critical sample preparation step in immunological, hematological, and molecular biology workflows. Erythrocytes can overwhelm cell preparations, mask minority populations, and introduce hemoglobin that inhibits downstream enzymatic reactions. Understanding how erythrocyte lysis solutions work and choosing the right product for your application is fundamental to obtaining high-quality results.
Why Remove Erythrocytes?
In whole blood or bone marrow samples, erythrocytes can constitute 99% of all nucleated cells. For flow cytometry immunophenotyping, the presence of RBCs dilutes leukocyte populations, reduces staining quality, and can cause non-specific antibody binding. For nucleic acid extraction, hemoglobin and its metabolites inhibit PCR enzymes.
Efficient and selective removal of erythrocytes without affecting leukocyte viability or phenotype is therefore a key step in sample preparation.
Mechanisms of Erythrocyte Lysis
Commercial erythrocyte lysis solutions work by osmotic shock or detergent-mediated disruption of RBC membranes. The most widely used approach is hypotonic lysis using ammonium chloride-based buffers (ACK or NH4Cl/KHCO3/EDTA). The lower osmolarity of the lysis buffer causes water to enter RBCs rapidly, swelling and rupturing them, while leukocytes — which have compensatory mechanisms — survive with appropriate buffer design and incubation time.
A fixative component (typically potassium bicarbonate) helps minimize leukocyte damage.
Protocol Considerations
Effective erythrocyte lysis depends on: correct dilution and incubation time (usually 5-15 minutes at room temperature), prompt quenching with isotonic PBS to stop lysis and protect remaining cells, temperature control, and sample age (fresh samples lyse more efficiently than aged samples).
Excessive lysis time or multiple lysis cycles can reduce leukocyte viability and alter surface marker expression, which is important to avoid for accurate flow cytometry results.
Impact on Downstream Applications
After lysis and washing, cells should be checked for residual RBC contamination by microscopy or flow cytometry (CD235a for RBCs). Adequate RBC removal is essential for: accurate leukocyte differential counts, clean flow cytometry scatter plots, high-quality cDNA library preparation from sorted cells, and unbiased NGS-based single cell RNA sequencing.
For some applications like scRNA-seq, even small numbers of contaminating RBCs can distort library composition and downstream analysis.
Alternative Approaches: Density Gradient Separation
Ficoll or Percoll density gradient centrifugation provides an alternative to chemical lysis for certain applications. Density gradients separate mononuclear cells (lymphocytes, monocytes) from granulocytes, RBCs, and debris based on density differences.
For applications requiring granulocytes, density gradients combined with a separate RBC lysis step are needed. For peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) isolation, Ficoll separation is often preferred as it also removes platelets.
Choosing an Erythrocyte Lysis Solution
When selecting a lysis solution, consider: intended application (flow cytometry vs. extraction vs. cell culture), species compatibility (mouse, rat, and human blood have different RBC fragility profiles), single vs. multi-lysis protocols, and regulatory requirements for clinical samples. DSS Image offers validated erythrocyte lysis solutions for research and clinical laboratory applications.
Learn More & Purchase
For more information and to purchase this product, visit the official product page: Erythrocyte Lysis Solution: Optimizing Blood Sample Preparation — DSS Image offers expert technical support, competitive pricing, and fast delivery for all products listed.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q1: What is the most commonly used erythrocyte lysis buffer?
A: ACK (ammonium-chloride-potassium) lysis buffer is the most widely used formulation for its gentle effect on leukocytes.
Q2: How many lysis cycles are recommended for bone marrow samples?
A: Bone marrow samples often require 2-3 lysis cycles due to higher RBC density. Monitor cell viability between cycles.
Q3: Does erythrocyte lysis affect surface marker expression?
A: Standard lysis protocols have minimal effect on most surface markers. Avoid over-lysis and keep samples cold after lysis.
Q4: Can erythrocyte lysis be used before RNA extraction?
A: Yes, but RBC lysis before RNA extraction can improve RNA purity by reducing hemoglobin-associated PCR inhibitors.
Q5: What is the typical RBC removal efficiency with standard lysis?
A: A single lysis cycle typically removes >99% of erythrocytes from peripheral blood under optimized conditions.
Q6: Is erythrocyte lysis compatible with fixed cells?
A: Lysis should be performed on unfixed cells. Fixation before lysis reduces lysis efficiency and cell recovery.

