Researchers in the Herzenberg laboratory at Stanford University have patented a method to quantify antigens during flow cytometry without the use of calibrators.
Researchers in Dr. Holden Maecker's lab have developed platinum-labeled probes to expand the analytical capacity of mass cytometry instruments. Currently, analytical capacity is limited by the ability to label specific probes with appropriate metal ions.
This nanoparticle platform for electric field detection is the first inorganic platform to use both intensity and spectro-ratiometric (relative color change) readout for the determination of local electric fields in vitro, in vivo, and in situ.
Researchers in Dr. Leonore Herzenberg's lab at Stanford have developed this technology and another (see Stanford Docket S15-009) to improve the ease and accuracy of flow cytometry experiments.
Dr. Brian Zabel and Prof. Eugene Butcher have developed rat monoclonal antibodies (clones BZ2E3 and BZ5B8, rIgG2aκ isotype) to the mouse chemokine (CC motif) receptor-like 2 (CCRL2) protein.