Flow cytometry is a single-cell analytical technique that uses fluorophore-labeled cell structures or biomarkers to differentiate between cell populations. Through this method, researchers detect the ...
Flow cytometry is an invaluable method for biomedical research. Since its development over 50 years ago, technology for flow cytometry has progressed rapidly, allowing for the detection of more and ...
Most cytometers are for analysis only, and are not equipped with sorters. Those that have sorters tend to fall into one of two very broad classes. Flow cytometers equipped with high-speed sorters are ...
Featured in the journal Science and unveiled at last year’s International Society for Advancement of Cytometry CYTO conference, BD‘s first-of-its-kind cell-sorting technology has now launched ...
Chinese researchers have developed an advanced, high-throughput single-cell sorting platform that enables direct isolation of living cells with targeted metabolic profiles from large mutant libraries.
Flow cytometry offers practical advantages for real-time monitoring of CAR T cell expansion, persistence, and toxicity risk in aggressive large B-cell lymphoma patients. Early CAR T cell expansion is ...
Flow cytometry, invented in the 1950s, uses antibodies linked to fluorescent probes to detect cell surface and intracellular proteins. Although able to achieve single-cell sensitivity, the method is ...
Flow cytometry is an established technique for counting and characterising cells, including blood, stem and cancer cells in biomedicine. The principle involves illuminating cells while they pass along ...
When generating induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) for use in downstream applications, it is commonplace to perform initial checks for key attributes such as viability and pluripotency. This ...
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