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1.
Flow cytometry: instrumentation and application in phytoplankton research   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In flow cytometry, light scattering and fluorescence of individual particles in suspension is measured at high speed. When applied to planktonic particles, the light scattering and (auto-)fluorescence properties of algal cells can be used for cell identification and counting. Analysis of the wide size spectrum of phytoplankton species, generally present in eutrophic inland and coastal waters, requires flow cytometers specially designed for this purpose. This paper compares the performance in phytoplankton research of a commercial flow cytometer to a purpose built instrument. It reports on the identification of phytoplankton and indicates an area where flow cytometry may supersede more conventional techniques: the analysis of morphological and physiological characteristics of subpopulations in phytoplankton samples.  相似文献   

2.
FLOW CYTOMETRY AND THE SINGLE CELL IN PHYCOLOGY   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Flow cytometers measure light scattering and fluorescence characteristics from individual particles in a fluid stream as they cross one or more light beams at rates of up to thousands of events per second. Flow cytometrically detectable optical signals may arise naturally from algae, reflecting cell size, structure, and endogenous pigmentation, or may be generated by fluorescent stains that report the presence of otherwise undetected cellular constituents. Some flow cytometers can physically sort particles with desired optical characteristics out of the flow stream and collect them for subsequent culture or other analyses. The statistically rigorous, cell‐level perspective provided by flow cytometry has been advantageous in experimental investigations of phycological problems, such as the regulation of cell cycle progression. The capacity of flow cytometry to measure large numbers of cells in large numbers of samples rapidly and quantitatively has been used extensively by biological oceanographers to define the distributions and dynamics of marine picophytoplankton. Recent work has shown that flow cytometry can be used to elucidate relationships between the optical properties of individual cells and the bulk optical properties of the water they live in, and thereby may provide an explicit link between algal physiology and global biogeochemistry. Unfortunately, commercially available flow cytometers that are optimized for biomedical applications have a limited capacity to analyze larger phytoplankton. To circumvent these limitations, many investigators are developing flow cytometers specifically designed for analyzing the broad range of sizes, shapes, and pigments found among algae. These new instruments can perform some novel measurements, including simple fluorescence excitation spectra, detailed angular scattering measurements, and in‐flow digital imaging. The growing accessibility and power of flow cytometers may allow the technology to be applied to a wider array of problems in phycology, including investigations of nonplanktonic and multicellular algae, but also presents new challenges for effectively analyzing the large quantity of multiparameter data produced. Ultimately, the detection of molecular probes by flow cytometry may allow single‐cell taxonomic and physiological information to be garnered for a variety of algae, both in culture and in nature.  相似文献   

3.
Flow cytometry has become a powerful analytical tool for applications ranging from blood diagnostics to high throughput screening of molecular assemblies on microsphere arrays. However, instrument size, expense, throughput, and consumable use limit its use in resource poor areas of the world, as a component in environmental monitoring, and for detection of very rare cell populations. For these reasons, new technologies to improve the size and cost-to-performance ratio of flow cytometry are required. One such technology is the use of acoustic standing waves that efficiently concentrate cells and particles to the center of flow channels for analysis. The simplest form of this method uses one-dimensional acoustic standing waves to focus particles in rectangular channels. We have developed one-dimensional acoustic focusing flow channels that can be fabricated in simple capillary devices or easily microfabricated using photolithography and deep reactive ion etching. Image and video analysis demonstrates that these channels precisely focus single flowing streams of particles and cells for traditional flow cytometry analysis. Additionally, use of standing waves with increasing harmonics and in parallel microfabricated channels is shown to effectively create many parallel focused streams. Furthermore, we present the fabrication of an inexpensive optical platform for flow cytometry in rectangular channels and use of the system to provide precise analysis. The simplicity and low-cost of the acoustic focusing devices developed here promise to be effective for flow cytometers that have reduced size, cost, and consumable use. Finally, the straightforward path to parallel flow streams using one-dimensional multinode acoustic focusing, indicates that simple acoustic focusing in rectangular channels may also have a prominent role in high-throughput flow cytometry.  相似文献   

4.
Flow cytometry for high-throughput, high-content screening   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Flow cytometry is a mature platform for quantitative multi-parameter measurement of cell fluorescence. Recent innovations allow up to 30-fold faster serial processing of bulk cell samples. Homogeneous discrimination of free and cell-bound fluorescent probe eliminates wash steps to streamline sample processing. Compound screening throughput may be further enhanced by multiplexing of assays on color-coded bead or cell suspension arrays and by integrating computational techniques to create smaller, focused compound libraries. Novel bead-based assay systems allow studies of real-time interactions between solubilized receptors, ligands and molecular signaling components that recapitulate and extend measurements in intact cells. These new developments, and its broad usage, position flow cytometry as an attractive analysis platform for high-throughput, high-content biological testing and drug discovery.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Conventional flow cytometry does not allow the rapid analysis of multiple samples. This has limited its uses in drug discovery, for which the standard for throughput is 100,000 samples per day. METHODS: We describe a simple method in which commercial peristaltic tubing is connected from a commercial autosampler to a flow cytometer. The samples are delivered via a peristaltic pump from source wells in a multiwell plate. The samples are separated by air bubbles. RESULTS: Throughput rates approach the limit of the autosampler (up to 100 wells per minute). Using optimal tubing and flow rates, particles remain within appropriate light scatter and fluorescence gates. The carryover between wells is typically less than 5% without and 1% with a wash step. The volumes of sample delivered are in the microliter scale. The approach has been validated with instruments from three manufacturers. CONCLUSIONS: Flow cytometry has potential throughput of 100,000 samples or more per day starting with the method described. The method is currently best suited to end-point assays. However, combined with high-speed sorting and single- cell assays, the number of assays could approach 1 billion per day.  相似文献   

6.
Methods and techniques used to detect apoptosis have benefited from advances in technologies such as flow cytometry. With a large arsenal of lasers, fluorescent labels, and readily accessible biological targets, it is possible to detect multiple targets with unique combinations of fluorescent spectral signatures from a single sample. Traditional flow cytometry has been limited as a screening tool as the sample throughput has been low, whereas the data analysis and generation of screening relevant results have been complex. The HTFC Screening System running ForeCyt software is an instrument platform designed to perform high-throughput, multiplexed screening with seamless transformation of flow cytometry data into screening hits. We report the results of a screen that simultaneously quantified caspase 3/7 activation, annexin V binding, cell viability, and mitochondrial integrity. Assay performance over 5 days demonstrated robustness, reliability, and performance of the assay. This system is high throughput in that a 384-well plate can be read and fully analyzed within 30 min and is sensitive with an assay window of at least 10-fold for all parameters and a Z' factor of ≥0.75 for all endpoints and time points. From a screen of 231 compounds, 11 representative toxicity profiles highlighting differential activation of apoptotic pathways were identified.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Plug flow cytometry is a recently developed system for the automated delivery of multiple small boluses or "plugs" of cells or particles to the flow cytometer for analysis. Important system features are that sample plugs are of precisely defined volume and that the sample vessel need not be pressurized. We describe how these features enable direct cell concentration determinations and novel ways to integrate flow cytometers with other analytical instruments. METHODS: Adhesion assays employed human polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) loaded with Fura Red and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells cotransfected with genes for green fluorescent protein (GFP) and human P-selectin. U937 cells expressing the human 7-transmembrane formyl peptide receptor were loaded with the fluorescent probe indo-1 for intracellular ionized calcium determinations. A computer-controlled syringe or peristaltic pump loaded the sample into a sample loop of the plug flow coupler, a reciprocating eight-port valve. When the valve position was switched, the plug of sample in the sample loop was transported to the flow cytometer by a pressure-driven fluid line. RESULTS: In stirred mixtures of PMNs and CHO cells, we used plug flow cytometry to directly quantify changes in concentrations of nonadherent singlet PMNs. This approach enabled accurate quantification of adherent PMNs in multicell aggregates. We constructed a novel plug flow interface between the flow cytometer and a cone-plate viscometer to enable real-time flow cytometric analysis of cell-cell adhesion under conditions of uniform shear. The High Throughput Pharmacology System (HTPS) is an instrument used for automated programming of complex pharmacological cell treatment protocols. It was interfaced via the plug flow coupling device to enable rapid (< 5 min) flow cytometric characterization of the intracellular calcium dose-response profile of U937 cells to formyl peptide. CONCLUSIONS: By facilitating the coupling of flow cytometers to other fluidics-based analytical instruments, plug flow cytometry has extended analytical capabilities in cell adhesion and pharmacological characterization of receptor-ligand interactions.  相似文献   

8.
Image‐based cellular assay advances approaches to dissect complex cellular characteristics through direct visualization of cellular functional structures. However, available technologies face a common challenge, especially when it comes to the unmet need for unraveling population heterogeneity at single‐cell precision: higher imaging resolution (and thus content) comes at the expense of lower throughput, or vice versa. To overcome this challenge, a new type of imaging flow cytometer based upon an all‐optical ultrafast laser‐scanning imaging technique, called free‐space angular‐chirp‐enhanced delay (FACED) is reported. It enables an imaging throughput (>20 000 cells s?1) 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than the camera‐based imaging flow cytometers. It also has 2 critical advantages over optical time‐stretch imaging flow cytometry, which achieves a similar throughput: (1) it is widely compatible to the repertoire of biochemical contrast agents, favoring biomolecular‐specific cellular assay and (2) it enables high‐throughput visualization of functional morphology of individual cells with subcellular resolution. These capabilities enable multiparametric single‐cell image analysis which reveals cellular heterogeneity, for example, in the cell‐death processes demonstrated in this work—the information generally masked in non‐imaging flow cytometry. Therefore, this platform empowers not only efficient large‐scale single‐cell measurements, but also detailed mechanistic analysis of complex cellular processes.   相似文献   

9.
Flow cytometers based on optical sensing utilize external light sources and fluorescent dyes to measure one or more specific components or properties of individual cells or subcellular particles in liquid suspension. To provide for independent excitation of two dyes used in double staining experiments we have constructed a high resolution flow cytometer that uses two laser beams to provide two wavelengths of excitation. These beams are separated spatially so that cells flow through them sequentially, with a time separation of about 20 musec. Since the dyes are excited sequentially their emission occurs at different times and their emission spectra may overlap without causing any difficulty in analysis. We have developed new light collection optics that permit up to four measurements to be made on each cell. This approach greatly increases the number of dye combinations that can be used in flow cytometry, thus removing a significant limitation of single illumination instruments.  相似文献   

10.
High‐throughput screening (HTS) technology is gaining increasing importance in downstream process development of cell‐based products. The development of such HTS‐technologies, however, is highly dependent on the availability of robust, accurate, and sensitive high‐throughput cell quantification methods. In this article, we compare state‐of‐the‐art cell quantification methods with focus on their applicability in HTS‐platforms for downstream processing of cell‐based products. Sensitivity, dynamic range, and precision were evaluated for four methods that differ in their respective mechanism. In addition, we evaluated the performance of these methods over a range of buffer compositions, medium densities, and viscosities, representing conditions found in many downstream processing methods. We found that CellTiter‐Glo? and flow cytometry are excellent tools for high‐throughput cell quantification. Both methods have broad working ranges (3–4 log) and performed well over a wide range of buffer compositions. In comparison, CyQuant® Direct and CellTracker? had smaller working ranges and were more sensitive to changes in buffer composition. For fast and sensitive quantification of a single cell type, CellTiter‐Glo? performed best, while for more complex cell mixtures flow cytometry is the method of choice. Our analysis will facilitate the selection of the most suitable method for a specific application and provides a benchmark for future HTS development in downstream processing of cell‐based products.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: The development of inexpensive small flow cytometers is recognized as an important goal for many applications ranging from medical uses in developing countries for disease diagnosis to use as an analytical platform in support of homeland defense. Although hydrodynamic focusing is highly effective at particle positioning, the use of sheath fluid increases assay cost and reduces instrument utility for field and autonomous remote operations. METHODS: This work presents the creation of a novel flow cell that uses ultrasonic acoustic energy to focus small particles to the center of a flowing stream for analysis by flow cytometry. Experiments using this flow cell are described wherein its efficacy is evaluated under flow cytometric conditions with fluorescent microspheres. RESULTS: Preliminary laboratory experiments demonstrate acoustic focusing of flowing 10-microm latex particles into a tight sample stream that is approximately 40 microm in diameter. Prototype flow cytometer measurements using an acoustic-focusing flow chamber demonstrated focusing of a microsphere sample to a central stream approximately 40 microm in diameter, yielding a definite fluorescence peak for the microspheres as compared with a broad distribution for unfocused microspheres. CONCLUSIONS: The flow cell developed here uses acoustic focusing, which inherently concentrates the sample particles to the center of the sample stream. This method could eliminate the need for sheath fluid, and will enable increased interrogation times for enhanced sensitivity, while maintaining high particle-analysis rates. The concentration effect will also enable the analysis of extremely dilute samples on the order of several particles per liter, at analysis rates of a few particles per second. Such features offer the possibility of a truly versatile low-cost portable flow cytometer for field applications.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: Nanophytoplankton (2-20 microm) are less numerous than picophytoplankton (<2 microm) in the oceans but their biomass and production are comparable and sometimes higher. The accuracy of cytometry-based enumeration of phytoplankton ultimately depends on cell abundance and sample flow rate. Commercial flow cytometers in which sheath and core streams are driven by air pressure cannot produce sufficiently high, stable sample flow rate. The present study demonstrates the applicability of a syringe pump for flow cytometric enumeration of oceanic nanophytoplankton on two meridional transects across the Atlantic Ocean. METHODS: Commercially available syringe pumps were used to deliver live phytoplankton samples into a flow cell of standard flow cytometers (FACSort, FACSCalibur, BD) with increased flow rate of > 1.0 ml min(-) (1) compared to the normal air pressure sample delivery of < 0.1 ml min(-) (1). An auxiliary application of syringe pump flow cytometry for calibrating 0.5 microm bead concentration standards is also discussed. RESULTS: The results demonstrated that flow cytometry of samples injected at rates above 0.1 ml min(-) (1) is achievable and worthwhile. Counts of phytoplankton in air and syringe pumped samples agreed closely. Syringe pumping of samples offered a broader range of flow rates up to 0.8-1.0 ml min(-) (1) without detrimental effect on flow cytometric enumeration of cells. The increased number of coincidences at high flow rates led to an approximate 10% decrease of Cyanobacteria counts when the acquisition rate approached 1,000 particles s(-) (1), but seemed to have a lesser effect on counting rarer phytoplankton. The syringe pump flow cytometry allowed enumeration of phytoplankton groups at concentrations of 5-100 cells ml(-) (1), cell concentrations equivalent to those of Cyanobacteria in the twilight deep ocean. CONCLUSION: The proposed syringe pump modification of a FACS instrument represents a significant improvement for accurate enumeration of the less abundant phytoplankton and so gives better estimations of phytoplankton distribution and standing stocks.  相似文献   

13.
Traditionally, many cell-based assays that analyze cell populations and functionalities have been performed using flow cytometry. However, flow cytometers remain relatively expensive and require highly trained operators for routine maintenance and data analysis. Recently, an image cytometry system has been developed by Nexcelom Bioscience (Lawrence, MA, USA) for automated cell concentration and viability measurement using bright-field and fluorescent imaging methods. Image cytometry is analogous to flow cytometry in that gating operations can be performed on the cell population based on size and fluorescent intensity. In addition, the image cytometer is capable of capturing bright-field and fluorescent images, allowing for the measurement of cellular size and fluorescence intensity data. In this study, we labeled a population of cells with an enzymatic vitality stain (calcein-AM) and a cell viability dye (propidium iodide) and compared the data generated by flow and image cytometry. We report that measuring vitality and viability using the image cytometer is as effective as flow cytometric assays and allows for visual confirmation of the sample to exclude cellular debris. Image cytometry offers a direct method for performing fluorescent cell-based assays but also may be used as a complementary tool to flow cytometers for aiding the analysis of more complex samples.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of cell size, shape and deformability on cellular function have long been a topic of interest. Recently, mechanical phenotyping technologies capable of analysing large numbers of cells in real time have become available. This has important implications for biology and medicine, especially haemato-oncology and immunology, as immune cell mechanical phenotyping, immunologic function, and malignant cell transformation are closely linked and potentially exploitable to develop new diagnostics and therapeutics. In this review, we introduce the technologies used to analyse cellular mechanical properties and review emerging findings following the advent of high throughput deformability cytometry. We largely focus on cells from the myeloid lineage, which are derived from the bone marrow and include macrophages, granulocytes and erythrocytes. We highlight advances in mechanical phenotyping of cells in suspension that are revealing novel signatures of human blood diseases and providing new insights into pathogenesis of these diseases. The contributions of mechanical phenotyping of cells in suspension to our understanding of drug mechanisms, identification of novel therapeutics and monitoring of treatment efficacy particularly in instances of haematologic diseases are reviewed, and we suggest emerging topics of study to explore as high throughput deformability cytometers become prevalent in laboratories across the globe.  相似文献   

15.
High‐throughput sequencing (HTS) of PCR amplicons is becoming the method of choice to sequence one or several targeted loci for phylogenetic and DNA barcoding studies. Although the development of HTS has allowed rapid generation of massive amounts of DNA sequence data, preparing amplicons for HTS remains a rate‐limiting step. For example, HTS platforms require platform‐specific adapter sequences to be present at the 5′ and 3′ end of the DNA fragment to be sequenced. In addition, short multiplex identifier (MID) tags are typically added to allow multiple samples to be pooled in a single HTS run. Existing methods to incorporate HTS adapters and MID tags into PCR amplicons are either inefficient, requiring multiple enzymatic reactions and clean‐up steps, or costly when applied to multiple samples or loci (fusion primers). We describe a method to amplify a target locus and add HTS adapters and MID tags via a linker sequence using a single PCR. We demonstrate our approach by generating reference sequence data for two mitochondrial loci (COI and 16S) for a diverse suite of insect taxa. Our approach provides a flexible, cost‐effective and efficient method to prepare amplicons for HTS.  相似文献   

16.
A high‐throughput sample preparation protocol based on the use of 96‐well molecular weight cutoff (MWCO) filter plates was developed for shotgun proteomics of cell lysates. All sample preparation steps, including cell lysis, buffer exchange, protein denaturation, reduction, alkylation and proteolytic digestion are performed in a 96‐well plate format, making the platform extremely well suited for processing large numbers of samples and directly compatible with functional assays for cellular proteomics. In addition, the usage of a single plate for all sample preparation steps following cell lysis reduces potential samples losses and allows for automation. The MWCO filter also enables sample concentration, thereby increasing the overall sensitivity, and implementation of washing steps involving organic solvents, for example, to remove cell membranes constituents. The optimized protocol allowed for higher throughput with improved sensitivity in terms of the number of identified cellular proteins when compared to an established protocol employing gel‐filtration columns.  相似文献   

17.
Fluorescence is a mainstay of bioanalytical methods, offering sensitive and quantitative reporting, often in multiplexed or multiparameter assays. Perhaps the best example of the latter is flow cytometry, where instruments equipped with multiple lasers and detectors allow measurement of 15 or more different fluorophores simultaneously, but increases beyond this number are limited by the relatively broad emission spectra. Surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) from metal nanoparticles can produce signal intensities that rival fluorescence, but with narrower spectral features that allow a greater degree of multiplexing. We are developing nanoparticle SERS tags as well as Raman flow cytometers for multiparameter single cell analysis of suspension or adherent cells. SERS tags are based on plasmonically active nanoparticles (gold nanorods) whose plasmon resonance can be tuned to give optimal SERS signals at a desired excitation wavelength. Raman resonant compounds are adsorbed on the nanoparticles to confer a unique spectral fingerprint on each SERS tag, which are then encapsulated in a polymer coating for conjugation to antibodies or other targeting molecules. Raman flow cytometry employs a high resolution spectral flow cytometer capable of measuring the complete SERS spectra, as well as conventional flow cytometry measurements, from thousands of individual cells per minute. Automated spectral unmixing algorithms extract the contributions of each SERS tag from each cell to generate high content, multiparameter single cell population data. SERS-based cytometry is a powerful complement to conventional fluorescence-based cytometry. The narrow spectral features of the SERS signal enables more distinct probes to be measured in a smaller region of the optical spectrum with a single laser and detector, allowing for higher levels of multiplexing and multiparameter analysis.  相似文献   

18.
The analysis of protein-protein interactions is a key focus of proteomics efforts. The yeast two-hybrid system (Y2H) has been the most commonly used method in genome-wide searches for protein interaction partners. However, the throughput of the current yeast two-hybrid array approach is hampered by the involvement of the time-consuming LacZ assay and/or the incompatibility of liquid handling automation due to the requirement for selection of colonies/diploids on agar plates. To facilitate large-scale Y2H assays, we report a novel array approach by coupling a GFP reporter based Y2H system with high throughput flow cytometry that enables the processing of a 96-well plate in as little as 3 min. In this approach, the yEGFP reporter has been established in both AH109 (MATa) and Y187 (MATα) reporter cells. It not only allows the generation of two copies of GFP reporter genes in diploid cells, but also allows the convenient determination of self-activators generated from both bait and prey constructs by flow cytometry. We demonstrate a Y2H array assay procedure that is carried out completely in liquid media in 96-well plates by mating bait and prey cells in liquid YPD media, selecting the diploids containing positive interaction pairs in selective media and analyzing the GFP reporter directly by flow cytometry. We have evaluated this flow cytometry based array procedure by showing that the interaction of the positive control pair P53/T is able to be reproducibly detected at 72 hr postmating compared with the negative control pairs. We conclude that our flow cytometry based yeast two-hybrid approach is robust, convenient, quantitative, and is amenable to large-scale analysis using liquid-handling automation.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Measuring CD4 T-cell counts at low cost is relevant in dealing with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic throughout the developing world. The recently introduced novel concepts in gating strategies and sample stabilization facilitate affordable immunophenotyping by flow cytometry. However, the impact of these developments is still limited by the high cost of currently available flow cytometers. METHODS: Diode lasers emitting 10-15 mW at 635 nm are one-tenth the size and cost and require one thousandth the power of an equivalent 488-nm argon ion laser. We used the available 635-nm diode-based flow cytometers, including PA-II, Luminex 100, SuperMot, and FACSCalibur, to investigate whether these instruments can generate reliable CD4 counts when used with allophycocyanin (APC) and cyanin-5 (Cy5)-labeled CD4 antibodies. RESULTS: We document the feasibility of obtaining leucocyte differential counts using orthogonal side scatter (SSC) without the need for forward scatter (FSC). Accurate CD4% values among lymphocytes and leucocytes can be obtained by primary CD4 gating using a single CD4 monoclonal antibody conjugated to APC or Cy5. Double immunofluorescence (IF) staining with CD4-APC (FL1) and CD45-APC-Cy7 (FL2) introduces pan-leucogating for a convenient assessment of absolute CD4 counts on double platforms. We demonstrate that small flow cytometers with laser diodes are capable of delivering absolute CD4 T-cell counts with a precision similar to the performance of the current state-of-the-art single-platform instruments (e.g., the CytoronAbsolute; R(2) = 0.961). In this respect, they appear to be superior to the nonflow CD4 counting techniques. CONCLUSIONS: Accurate CD4 counts can be generated at minimal cost on red diode laser-operated flow cytometers, retaining the potential for high throughput capacity without compromising precision. With further improvements in volumetric technology and clinical software, these cytometers may develop into a new generation of inexpensive battery-operated laboratory hardware that combines cellular phenotyping with bead-based multiplexing immunoassays for (HIV) serology.  相似文献   

20.
Flow cytometry allows high-content, multiparameter analysis of single cells, making it a promising tool for drug discovery and profiling of intracellular signaling. To add high-throughput capacity to flow cytometry, we developed a cell-based multiplexing technique called fluorescent cell barcoding (FCB). In FCB, each sample is labeled with a different signature, or barcode, of fluorescence intensity and emission wavelengths, and mixed with other samples before antibody staining and analysis by flow cytometry. Using three FCB fluorophores, we were able to barcode and combine entire 96-well plates, reducing antibody consumption 100-fold and acquisition time to 5-15 min per plate. Using FCB and phospho-specific flow cytometry, we screened a small-molecule library for inhibitors of T cell-receptor and cytokine signaling, simultaneously determining compound efficacy and selectivity. We also analyzed IFN-gamma signaling in multiple cell types from primary mouse splenocytes, revealing differences in sensitivity and kinetics between B cells, CD4+ and CD4- T cells and CD11b-hi cells.  相似文献   

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