RE: Looking for advice on pediatric samples

From: Shacklett, Barbara <blshacklett@UCDAVIS.EDU>
Date: Wed Jun 22 2005 - 14:08:19 EST
Bunny, another thought: if your Core has some extra money you might
consider the Cytek 2nd laser upgrade for the FACScan, which would give
you a red laser able to read APC and APC-Cy7...5 colors in all. We did
this recently at UC Davis, and are very happy with the results (no, I
don't have stock in Cytek!). 

 

Barbara

 

--------------------------------------------------------

Barbara L. Shacklett, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor

Dept. of Medical Microbiology and Immunology

School of Medicine

University of California 

3327 Tupper Hall, 1 Shields Avenue

Davis, CA 95616  USA

Tel.:  +1 (530) 752-6785

Fax:  +1 (530) 752-8692

blshacklett@ucdavis.edu

 

-----Original Message-----
From: bunny [mailto:bunny@cotleur.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2005 2:14 PM
To: cyto-inbox
Subject: Looking for advice on pediatric samples

 

Hello Flowers! 

 

I'm looking for advice from someone/anyone who is currently analyzing
small cell numbers by flow cytometry. (NOT low frequency, but very few
events to begin with). 

 

We are planning to start analyzing pediatric CSF samples in the near
future. Since we are expecting very SMALL sample volumes with very FEW
cells, I'm looking for advice on the best way to simultaneously quantify
chemokine receptors, cytokine expression and cell phenotypes. 

 

Is flow cytometry the best method in this case? With very few TOTAL
cells, should we try a microscopy approach? Can someone point (or SHOVE)
me towards the best method? 

 

Our current equipment choices: 

At the moment, our Flow core is only equipped with a Facscan and a LSR1.
I could feasibly do 4 color (with Viability on a 5th detector, using
UV). 

We are waiting to find out if we will be funded for an Aria. In any
case, we could actually take samples across town to be run on an Aria.
(I'm thinking in terms of maximizing # colors at this point). 

We will also have a small amt of equipment money- enough for a
FacsArray-type cytometer. Is there an advantage (as far as running
smaller samples) vs the traditional continuous stream? (We've removed
the droplet containment on the LSR1 years ago, so we already fixed the
problem with the DCM sucking the sample before we get the bar pulled
over. I regularly run 100ul samples without a problem). 

Our institution also has a well equipped Confocal /Fluorescent
Microscopy core. 

 

Thanks for any input! 

 

bunny 






Bunny Cotleur, M.S. 

Sr Research Technologist, Dept of Neurosciences 

Scientific Consultant, Flow Cytometry Core 

Cleveland Clinic Foundation 

Lerner Research Institute, NC30 

9500 Euclid Avenue 

Cleveland, OH 44195 

Lab: (216)444-1164 

********************************************* 

Caminante, no hay camino. Se hace camino al andar.
Received on Thu Jun 23 15:38:00 2005

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