| Definition | 
        Analysis of biological material by detection of the  light-absorbing or fluorescing properties of cells or subcellular fractions such  as chromosomes passing in a narrow stream through a laser beam. Flow cytometry can  be used with automated sorting devices to sort successive droplets of the  stream into different fractions depending on the fluorescence emitted by each  droplet.Flowcytometry is an emerging technique which holds  great promise for the  separation, classification and quantitation of blood  cells and antibodies which  affect blood cells. Complex computerised instruments are used to pass a  monocellular stream of cells, platelets or other microscopic particulate elements through a beam of laser light. The cells are categorised first by size  and then computer analysed to sort the mixture of cellular elements into celltype by size. Cells are labelled with fluorescent dye and then passed, in  suspending medium, through a narrow dropping nozzle so that each cell is in a  small droplet. A laser based detector system is used to excite fluorescence and  droplets with positively fluorescent cells are given an electric charge. Charged  and uncharged droplets are separated as they fall between charged plates and so  collect in different tubes. The machine can be used either as an analytical  tool, counting the number of labelled cells in a population or to separate the  cells for subsequent growth of the selected population. Further sophistication  can be built into the system by using a second laser system at right angles to  the first to look at a second fluorescent label or to gauge cell size on the  basis of light scatter. The great strength of the system is that it looks at large numbers of individual cells and makes possible the separation of  populations with, for example: particular surface properties. Tabulation of  counted data in conjunction with size analysis enables determination of relative  percentages of each specific cellular subset for which monoclonal antibody  conjugates are utilised, even when the size of the cell is identical to othersubset species. Flow cytometry is a slightly imprecise but common term for the use of the Fluorescence-activated Cell Sorter (FACS).
  |