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| Flow cytometry is a technique for counting, examining, and sorting microscopic particles suspended in a stream of fluid. It allows simultaneous multiparametric analysis of the physical and/or chemical characteristics of single cells flowing through an optical and/or electronic detection apparatus. |
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Cytometry web resource
recommended
site
Cytometry research resources including lectures, techniques, reviews etc. (Purdue cytometry laboratories) ...
Troubleshooting Fluorescent Microscopy Staining Errors
new recommended
troubleshooting
The troubleshooting guide gives detailed description on problems encountered in immunfluorescent microscopy. ( Michael W. Davidson and The Florida State University, Molecular Expressions)
Photomicrography under fluorescence illumination conditions presents ...
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Last update: 09-May-2008 11:58 am
Related new papers and reviews
Flow cytometry in plant breeding. Cytometry A. 2008 Apr 22; Authors: Ochatt SJ
Since the first report on the flow cytometric study of plant material 35 years ago, analyzing the nuclear DNA content of field bean, an ever increasing number of applications of FCM has been developed and applied in plant science and industry, but a similar length of time elapsed before the appearance of the first complete volume devoted to FCM of plant cells. Most published information on the uses of FCM addresses various aspects of animal (including human) cell biology, thus failing to provide a pertinent substitute. FCM represents an ideal means for the analysis of both cells and subcellular particles, with a potentially large number of parameters analyzed both rapidly, simultaneously, and quantitatively, thereby furnishing statistically exploitable data and allowing for an accurate and facilitated detection of subpopulations. It is, indeed, the summation of these facts that has established FCM as an important, and sometimes essential, tool for the understanding of fundamental mechanisms and processes underlying plant growth, development, and function. In this review, special attention is paid to FCM as applied to plant cells in the context of plant breeding, and some new and less well-known uses of it for plants will be discussed. (c) 2008 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.
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