ASTM F2149 Standard Test Method for Automated Analyses of Cells - the Electrical Sensing Zone Method of Enumerating and Sizing Single Cell Suspensions
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- Техэксперт: Машиностроительный комплекс
- Картотека зарубежных и международных стандартов
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- ASTM F2149 Standard Test Method for Automated Analyses of Cells - the Electrical Sensing Zone Method of Enumerating and Sizing Single Cell Suspensions
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ASTM International
Standard Test Method for Automated Analyses of Cells - the Electrical Sensing Zone Method of Enumerating and Sizing Single Cell Suspensions
N F2149
Annotation
This test method, provided the limitations are understood, covers a procedure for both the enumeration and measurement of size distribution of most all cell types. The instrumentation allows for user-selectable cell size settings, hence, this test method is not restricted to specific cell types. The method is appropriate for suspension as well as adherent cell cultures (1).2 This is a quantitative laboratory method not intended for on-line or field use. Results may be reported as number of cells per millilitre or total number of cells per volume of cell suspension analyzed. Both count and size distribution may be expressed in cell micron diameter or volume, femtolitres.
Cells commonly used in tissue-engineered medical products (2) routinely are analyzed. Examples are chondrocytes (3), fibroblasts (4), and keratinocytes (5). Szabo et al used the method for both pancreatic islet number and volume measurements (6). In addition, instrumentation using the electrical sensing zone technology was used for both count and size distribution analyses of porcine hepatocytes placed into hollow fiber cartridge extracorporeal liver assist systems. In this study (7), and others (6, 8), the automated electrical sensing zone method was clearly validated for superior accuracy and precision when compared to the conventional manual method, visual cell counting under a microscope using a hemocytometer. This validation has been demonstrated over a wide variety of cell types. In addition, the automated procedure is rapid, rugged, and cost effective; it also minimizes operator-to-operator variability inherent in manual techniques.
This instrumentation is manufactured by a variety of companies; however, the principle used in all is electrical impedance. This test method, for cell counting and sizing, is based on the detection and measurement of changes in electrical resistance produced by a cell, suspended in a conductive liquid, traversing through a small aperture (see Fig. 1 (9)). When cells are suspended in a conductive liquid, phosphatebuffered saline for instance, they function as discrete insulators. When the cell suspension is drawn through a small cylindrical aperture, the passage of each cell changes the impedance of the electrical path between two submerged electrodes located on each side of the aperture. An electrical pulse, suitable for both counting and sizing, results from the passage of each cell through the aperture. The path through the aperture, in which the cell is detected, is known as the "electronic sensing zone." This test method permits the selective counting of cells within very narrow size distribution ranges by electronic selection of the generated pulses. While the number of pulses indicates cell count, the amplitude of the electrical pulse produced depends on the cell's volume. The baseline resistance between the electrodes is due to the resistance of the conductive liquid within the boundaries of the aperture. The presence of cells within the "electronic sensing zone" raises the resistance of the conductive pathway that depends on the volume of the cell. Analyses of the behavior of cells within the aperture demonstrates that the height of the pulse produced by the cell is the parameter that most nearly shows proportionality to the cell volume.



