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Flow cytometry

Flow cytometry

Flow cytometry is a laser-based or impedance-based technique used for cell counting, cell sorting, biomarker detection and protein engineering. Cells are suspended in a stream of fluid and passed by an electronic detection apparatus. It is useful James Ewing , 1866–1943, Professor of Pathology , Cornell University Medical College, New Y ork, NY , USA, described this type of sarcoma in 1921. Frederick Sanger , 1918–2013, biochemist, Cambridge University , Cambridge, UK, awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry twice: once in 1958 for work on the structure of proteins and again in 1980 for work on base sequences of nucleic acids.

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Flow cytometry

Flow cytometry is a laser-based or impedance-based technique used for cell counting, cell sorting, biomarker detection and protein engineering. Cells are suspended in a stream of fluid and passed by an electronic detection apparatus. It is useful James Ewing , 1866–1943, Professor of Pathology , Cornell University Medical College, New Y ork, NY , USA, described this type of sarcoma in 1921. Frederick Sanger , 1918–2013, biochemist, Cambridge University , Cambridge, UK, awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry twice: once in 1958 for work on the structure of proteins and again in 1980 for work on base sequences of nucleic acids.

(b)

Flow cytometry

Flow cytometry is a laser-based or impedance-based technique used for cell counting, cell sorting, biomarker detection and protein engineering. Cells are suspended in a stream of fluid and passed by an electronic detection apparatus. It is useful James Ewing , 1866–1943, Professor of Pathology , Cornell University Medical College, New Y ork, NY , USA, described this type of sarcoma in 1921. Frederick Sanger , 1918–2013, biochemist, Cambridge University , Cambridge, UK, awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry twice: once in 1958 for work on the structure of proteins and again in 1980 for work on base sequences of nucleic acids.

(b)