Compensation refers to correcting a phenomenon called fluorescence spillover in flow cytometric analysis. This is the removal of the signal of any given fluorochrome from all detectors except the one ...
CAR-T translational research demands precise, reproducible, and scalable flow cytometry workflows. Manual centrifugation and antibody preparation steps remain major sources of variability and cell ...
Despite their success, significant challenges remain in developing and optimizing CAR-T therapies, particularly when broadening their use to solid tumors. Download this eBook to access our latest ...
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 ...
Although workflow is pretty much similar to conventional Flow Cytometry is good to get acquainted with how to prepare for spectral Flow Cytometry For set up, it is always advisable to have an ...
This technology has vast potential to help patients but remains underutilized and underappreciated. The tools are there. What’s lacking are harmonized controls, regulatory guidelines and database ...
Flow cytometry allows for the analysis of single cells in a population. This technique is analogous to microscopy, but instead of producing an image, a flow cytometer provides automated quantification ...
Flow cytometry remains a critical technology for the high-throughput analysis of single cells in complex populations. Attention to good analysis practices is more important than ever due to the recent ...
Flow cytometry is a widely used analytical technique that distinguishes between cell populations depending on the presence or absence of chosen markers. However, the number of markers that can be ...
FREMONT, Calif., Oct. 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Amid the reduction of various government grant programs and global economic challenges that have tightened research funding, Cytek Biosciences, Inc. ...
Around the same time, Mack Fulwyler, an engineer working at Los Alamos National Laboratory, needed to separate particles, so he drew on existing techniques to create droplets to separate cells from a ...