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Gel Microdroplets and Flow
Cytometry: Rapid Determination of Antibody Secretion by Individual Cells Within a Cell
Population
Biotechnology, April 1990,
vol. 8, pp. 333-337
Kevin T. Powell and James C.
Weaver
We report a new method capable of rapidly
determining the secretion of biologically important macromolecules from each of many
individual cells within a large population. This method combines flow cytometry with gel
microdroplets (GMDs), which in this study were agarose particles ranging from about 53 to
88 m m in diameter. The GMDs were formed from a liquid 2.5% agarose suspension with cells
at a concentration which yielded mostly zero or one cell per GMD. A large number of
extracellular binding sites were also provided within each GMD, allowing the capture of
secreted molecules, and their subsequent measurement by solid phase, fluorescence
immunoassay. The method was explored using a model system of mouse hybridoma (secreting)
and mouse masticytoma (non-secreting) cells. The method was able to determine
subpopulations of individual cells that secreted antibody in less than fifteen hours after
receipt of a conventional cell suspension.
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