Scientists commonly produce and archive samples as paraffin-embedded and formaldehyde-fixed (FFPE) tissue blocks. These blocks bring enormous conservation potential for future transcriptomic studies, but repairing and embedding tissues can cause RNA destruction, hindering reverse transcription-based transcriptome profiling. Scientists can overcome this difficulty by pairing in situ hybridization with the best tissue processing and expression assay workflow.Download this poster from 10x Genomics to find how the new Chromium Single Cell Fixed RNA Profiling assay records whole transcriptome expression in FFPE samples, allowing researchers to identify low-expressing genes with high sensitivity.Sponsored by