Beckman Coulter Life Sciences Competition Winner Announced

Renowned gene therapy research team from the UCL Cancer Institute awarded a CytoFLEX Flow Cytometer

18 Dec 2015
Weylan Kiam-Laine
Microbiologist

An internationally renowned gene therapy research team has won a $200,000 CytoFLEX Flow Cytometer from Beckman Coulter Life Sciences. The contest was designed to explore innovative research solutions involving flow cytometry. The winning team, headed up by Dr Martin Pulé, is from UCL Cancer Institute at University College London, UK. Their submission focused on capitalizing on the power of multi-parameter flow cytometry to expand understanding of the molecular mechanisms of cancer at the single cell level. The CytoFLEX Flow Cytometer measures up to 15 parameters with 13 colors for fluorescence detection, enabling it to detect and discriminate minute subpopulations. It is also available with a plate loader to facilitate the high throughput processing of samples. The instrument will be used at UCL to develop a novel screening strategy to help further solid tumor chimeric antigen receptor T-cell cancer immunotherapy.

The application was submitted on behalf of Dr Pulé’s team by Dr Brian Philip who is working on engineering marker-suicide genes. As he explained: “The objective is to combine gene marking with flow cytometry. Our challenge has always been to improve the identification of more effective tumour targets through enhanced understanding of the molecular basis of tumour engraftment and dissemination. "We propose to develop and test a novel marker-gene based platform for single cell tracking using multi-parameter flow cytometry. Randomised expression of multiple marker genes on the cell surface enable an extensive library of samples to be screened, which is enhanced by the number of parameters available on the analyzer."

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