Title: MICR 304 Introduction to Flow Cytometry
1MICR 304 Introduction to Flow Cytometry
2Overview
- What is flow cytometry?
- Development of flow cytometry
- Components of Flow
- Typical applications
- Flow data
3Flow Cytomtery
- Measurement (cytometry) of single cells in
suspension that pass by (flow) a laser beam - Not appropriate for analysis of cell clumps or
tissues - Discrete measurements from each cell in the
sample, providing a distribution rather than an
average of the measured characteristics in the
cell sample - Simultaneous measurement of multiple parameters
- Size (volume)
- Granularity (internal complexity)
- Fluorescence
Light scatter signals
Derived from fluorescent labels
4Basic Outline of a Flow Cytometer
Fluidics
Electronics
Optics
5Commercial History
- First commercial particle analyzer Model A
Coulter counter (1950) - First commercial fluorescence analyzer Partec
(1969) - First commercial cytometer, the Cytograph the
Cytofluorograph Kamentsky in 1970 - First commercial cell sorter Becton Dickinson
FACS-1 (1974, tradename) Hertzenberg - Epics series 1977-79 by Coulter
- First benchtop analyzers about 1981
- 3 Colors available 1985 and 4 colors in 1986
- First Benchtop Sorters 1992
- First commercial high-speed cell sorter
Cytomation MoFlo (1994)
6Advantages of Flow Cytometry
- Flexibility of the data acquisition
- Speed of measurement
- Thousands of cells can be analyzed in seconds
- Statistical information immediately available
- Ability to reanalyze with new gates gives us new
information from old acquisitions
7Measurements in Flow Cytometry
- Light Scatter
- All objects passing through a laser beam in a
cytometer will scatter light - Large objects will scatter more light in the
forward direction than small objects - Forward Angle Light Scatter (FSC), roughly
indicates size - Forward light scatter, FALS , FS, FSC
- Side Scatter near 90 (SSC), structure dependent
- reflective qualities, or granularity of a
particle - SS, SSC, 90 light scatter
- Actual laser spot is obscured and the light at 2
- 20 off the straight laser line is what is
measured
8Measurements in Flow Cytometry
- Fluorescence
- Excitation light energy is absorbed by
fluorescent molecule, and molecule is excited - As excited molecule returns to unexcited
ground-state, a specific wavelength is emitted. - Fluorescence emission is always of a longer
wavelength (lower energy ) than the excitation
wavelength. - The longer the wavelength the lower the energy
- The shorter the wavelength the higher the energy
- e.g.. UV light from sun causes the sunburn not
the red visible light
9Emission Accomplished!
- Fluorophore Excitation / Absorbance
- Wavelength dependent
- Fluorophore Emission / Fluorescence
- The light given off
- or emitted is at a longer wavelength but lower
energy -
Jablonski diagram illustrating the processes
involved in the creation of an excited electronic
singlet state by optical absorption and
subsequent emission of fluorescence.
10Visible Light Region of the Electromagnetic
Spectrum
Human eye can see 380nm-680nm
Spectrum is often shown this way
11Selected Laser Lines
Dyes
514
488
600 nm
300 nm
500 nm
700 nm
400 nm
PI
Ethidium
PE
FITC
12(FITC)
13Where is Fluorescence in Flow Cytometry Coming
from?
- Intrinsic fluorescence
- Genuine feature of the cell
- autofluorescence
- tryptophan, tyrosine, pigment content,
hemoglobin, - green fluorescent protein (GFP) - transfection
assays - static
- Extrinsic fluorescence
- Experimentally added to the cell
- Fluorescent probes/dyes - FITC, PE, PI, etc
- Static
- Kinetic
14Common Applications
- Immunophenotyping
- Made possible with the advent of Monoclonal
antibodies - Large majority of the uses of flow
- Determination of cell surface antigens and after
permeabilization for intracellular stains - Clinically important for disease prognosis and
diagnosis - The number of subsets of cells that can be
recognized is growing yearly. - DNA quantification
- Intercalating dyes like propidium iodide (red
fluorescent) - Functional assays
- Calcium probes, probes for oxidative burst (DHR),
membranes , phagocytosis assays, and many more
15Monoclonal Antibodies
- Immunization
- Isolation of B-cells
- Fusion with metabolically deficient myeloma cell
- Selection
- Cloning by limited dilution
16Example Lymphocyte Typing
17Following the Sample
From the sample tube
Through the aspiration rod
Through the tubing inside the instrument
Through the flow Cell
Intersecting the laser
Down the stream
Into Waste
or Sort collection tubes
18Following the Cytometer signal path
Stream
lens
Cell
Laser
Trigger signal
Cytometer
Slide Courtesy of Joe Trotter, Director, Flow
Cytometry Facility The Scripps Research Institute
19Histogram
IgM
IgD
20Statistics
- What types of statistics are we interested in??
- Percentages of populations
- How bright those are indicates how MUCH antigen
is present - Do those change?
- Is there a reaction to a stimulus?
21Example MICR 304 S2008
22Acknowledgement
- This lecture has been drawn from a Dakocytomation
training PowerPoint presentation - Credit to Andrew Beernink (abeernink_at_novasite.com)
Susan DeMaggio MS BSMT(ASCP)Qcym
(flocyte_at_cox.net)