Microscopy‐based multicolor tissue cytometry at the single‐cell level

RC Ecker, GE Steiner - Cytometry Part A: the journal of the …, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
RC Ecker, GE Steiner
Cytometry Part A: the journal of the International Society for …, 2004Wiley Online Library
Cytomics is a novel perspective from which to look at life. As with genomics and proteomics
before, this discipline requires novel and innovative techniques and technologies to focus
on its substrate of research—the cytome. With cytomics being the discipline that analyzes
cellular systems and their interdependencies, advanced microscopy represents a key
technology in cytomics research. Yet, conventional microscopy‐based investigations,
ie,“look and conclude” analyses, do not meet the major cytomics criteria of 1) relating …
Abstract
Cytomics is a novel perspective from which to look at life. As with genomics and proteomics before, this discipline requires novel and innovative techniques and technologies to focus on its substrate of research—the cytome. With cytomics being the discipline that analyzes cellular systems and their interdependencies, advanced microscopy represents a key technology in cytomics research. Yet, conventional microscopy‐based investigations, i.e., “look and conclude” analyses, do not meet the major cytomics criteria of 1) relating multiple parameters to each other, 2) within large populations of cells, 3) on a single‐cell basis, and 4) in a quantitative and observer‐independent manner. However, emerging improvements in the fields of fluorophore technology, sensitive fluorescence detection devices, and sophisticated image analysis procedures, are important and necessary steps into the cytomics era. Tissue represents an important class of cytomes, hence tissue cytometry—on the single cell level—can be expected to become an important cytomics technology. In this report, the techniques and technologies of microscopy‐based multicolor tissue cytometry (MMTC) are outlined and applications are discussed, including the phenotypic characterization of tissue infiltrating leukocytes, in situ quantification of proliferation markers and tumor suppressors, and in situ quantification of apoptosis. © 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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