Hello Christopher, We routinely do single cell and rare cell sorting in our labs. The easiest procedure to follow to identify what you have recovered, is to perform single-cell PCR analysis. Perform a comparative PCR analysis on a larger sample of the cells of interest if possible, alongside the single-cell PCR. We have also performed single cell DNA sequencing to corroborate the PCR findings. Lisa Reece, BS Asst. Director, Molecular Cytometry Unit University of Texas Medical Branch Dept. of Internal Med./Infectious Dis. Div. 301 University Blvd., Rt. 0435 Galveston, TX 77555-0435 Office 409.747.1927/Fax 409.772.6527 Labs 409.747.1852/Pager 409.643.3812 www.utmb.edu/stem "A problem is only a solution waiting to be discovered." -----Original Message----- From: Christopher A. Worth [mailto:caw@bcc.louisville.edu] Sent: Thursday, December 09, 2004 8:49 AM To: cyto-inbox Subject: Rare event sorting.... I've got a question. I've got some folks that are needing to sort out small populations. .1% or so and smaller. How do people prove to themselves that what they've got coming out is what they want when you're looking at a sorted quantity of 500 cells or so? At least that's what they expect to get in some cases. I'd like to be sure we're actually doing what we think we're doing. Thanks, ChrisReceived on Fri Dec 10 14:18:00 2004
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