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Evaluating the Effects of Cell Sorting on Gene Expression

Andrew Box, Monica DeLay, Scott Tighe, Sridar V. Chittur, Alan Bergeron, Matthew Cochran, Peter Lopez, Éric Meyer, Alan Saluk, Sherry Thornton, Kathleen M. Brundage

2020Journal of Biomolecular Techniques JBT29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, gene expression assays or functional assays, ensuring that the sorting process itself has little effect on the cells is of utmost importance. Previous studies examining the effects of sorting on cellular function have primarily focused on a specific cell type or condition. One of the goals of the Flow Cytometry Research Group of the Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities is to establish best practice guidelines for cell sorting conditions that minimize cell stress, perturbation, or injury to the sorted cell population. In this study, the effects of nozzle size, sample pressure, UV exposure, and instrument type were evaluated for their effects on gene expression and cell cycle using both established cell lines and primary cells across several flow cytometry shared facilities. Results indicate that nozzle size and pressure, as well as UV exposure and instrument type, have only minor effects on gene expression, which were diminished by subsequent culturing of the sorted cells. In this assessment, these data demonstrate that cell sorting itself, regardless of instrumentation used, has minimal effects on downstream cellular applications.

Topics & Concepts

Cell sortingFlow cytometryPopulationSortingCellCell typeGene expressionCytometryComputational biologyBiologyCell biologyGeneBioinformaticsComputer scienceMolecular biologyGeneticsMedicineAlgorithmEnvironmental healthSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing TechnologiesPluripotent Stem Cells Research
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