CARLSBAD, Calif. & PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Invitrogen Corporation (NASDAQ:IVGN), a provider of essential life science technologies for disease research and drug discovery, and ...
Multicolor flow cytometry is beneficial because it allows us to gain deeper insights from a given biological sample, with fewer repeat markers in each tube and quicker results. In this three-part ...
Scientists use multicolor flow cytometry to identify and characterize targeted cellular subpopulations by using multiple fluorescent markers. The technology has seen rapid advancements in recent years ...
Multicolor flow cytometry is a critical technique for many scientific endeavors, and a good experimental design is crucial for generating useful data. Being able to differentiate between the dyes and ...
A Czech scientist has contributed to understanding the function of the thymus—the training center of the immune system. T ...
Flow cytometry is a powerful tool to analyze and characterize cells based on their protein expression, most often those expressed on the cell surface. Multicolor flow cytometry uses multiple ...
Spectral flow cytometry collects the full emission spectrum of a fluorochrome, enabling multicolor panels with more parameters than conventional flow cytometry. As scientists discover the subtle ...
Invitrogen Corporation and ScienceXperts, Inc. have announced the launch of CytoGenie™, a knowledge-based software tool that simplifies the design of flow cytometry experiments, including multicolor ...
Imaging approaches are crucial for understanding biological processes 1,2,3. This is especially true for processes in complex tissues like bone and bone marrow, where skeletal stem cells are ...
The Global Flow Cytometry Market is expected to grow at a rate of 8% to reach ~$11billion by 2026. High incidence and prevalence of HIV/AIDS and cancer, growing focus on immunology and immuno-oncology ...
Life science researchers first learned of the utility of flow cytometry as a result of Prof. Wolfgang Göhde’s pioneering work at the University of Münster in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Leonard ...