Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Jan 20;6(1):e16053. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0016053.
Cell size is a defining characteristic central to cell function and ultimately to tissue architecture. The ability to sort cell subpopulations of different sizes would facilitate investigation at genomic and proteomic levels of mechanisms by which cells attain and maintain their size. Currently available cell sorters, however, cannot directly measure cell volume electronically, and it would therefore be desirable to know which of the optical measurements that can be made in such instruments provide the best estimate of volume. We investigated several different light scattering and fluorescence measurements in several different cell lines, sorting cell fractions from the high and low end of distributions, and measuring volume electronically to determine which sorting strategy yielded the best separated volume distributions. Since we found that different optical measurements were optimal for different cell lines, we suggest that following this procedure will enable other investigators to optimize their own cell sorters for volume-based separation of the cell types with which they work.
细胞大小是细胞功能的决定性特征,最终决定了组织架构。能够对不同大小的细胞亚群进行分类,将有助于在基因组和蛋白质组水平上研究细胞获得和维持其大小的机制。然而,目前可用的细胞分选器无法直接电子测量细胞体积,因此,了解这些仪器中可以进行的光学测量中哪一种可以提供对体积的最佳估计,将是非常理想的。我们在几种不同的细胞系中研究了几种不同的光散射和荧光测量,从分布的高低端分选细胞分数,并通过电子测量来测量体积,以确定哪种分选策略产生了最佳的分离体积分布。由于我们发现不同的光学测量对于不同的细胞系是最佳的,因此我们建议,按照此程序,将使其他研究人员能够针对他们所研究的细胞类型,对其自己的细胞分选器进行基于体积的分离进行优化。