SYNTHETIC HUMAN CELL MIMIC PARTICLE FOR CYTOMETRIC OR COULTER DEVICE

Abstract
Synthetic human cell mimic hydrogel particles and their use in cytometric or coulter device applications are described. The synthetic human cell mimic hydrogel particles described herein are selectively tunable to have at least one optical, volumetric, or capacitance property that is substantially similar to a corresponding optical, volumetric, or capacitance property of the human cell mimic hydrogel particle's natural biological cell counterpart.
Description
BACKGROUND

Flow cytometry is a technique that allows for the rapid separation, counting, and characterization of individual cells and is routinely used in clinical and laboratory settings for a variety of applications. The technology relies on directing a beam of light onto a hydrodynamically-focused stream of liquid. A number of detectors are then aimed at the point where the stream passes through the light beam: one in line with the light beam (Forward Scatter or FSC) and several perpendicular to it (Side Scatter or SSC). FSC correlates with the cell volume and SSC depends on the inner complexity of the particle (e.g., shape of the nucleus, the amount and type of cytoplasmic granules or the membrane roughness). As a result of these correlations, different specific cell types exhibit different FSC and SSC, allowing cell types to be distinguished in flow cytometry.


The ability to identify specific cell types, however, relies on proper calibration of the instrument, a process that has relied on the use of purified cells of the cell type of interest. Obtaining these purified cells can require costly, laborious procedures that are prone to batch-to-batch variation. Therefore, them is a need in the art for synthetic compositions with tunable optical properties that can mimic specific cell types in devices such as flow cytometers.


SUMMARY

In one aspect of the invention, a hydrogel particle comprising a polymerized monomer and having at least one surface is provided. The hydrogel particle has at least one optical property that is substantially similar to the at least one optical property of a target cell. The optical property in one embodiment, is a side scatter profile (SSC), forward scatter profile (FSC), a fluorescence emission profile, or a combination thereof. The target cell can be any target cell that the user specifies. For example, in one embodiment, the target cell is an immune cell, stem cell or cancer cell.


In another aspect, a method for calibrating a cylometric device for analysis of a target cell, is provided. In one embodiment, the method comprises inserting into the device a hydrogel particle having at least one optical property substantially similar to a target cell, wherein the hydrogel particle comprises a polymerized monomer and has at least one surface. The method further comprises measuring the at least one optical property of the hydrogel particle using the cytometric device. The at least one optical property in one embodiment, is used as a reference to detect a target cell in a sample.


In yet another aspect, a method for detecting a target cell in a sample is provided. The method comprises inserting into the device a hydrogel particle having at least one optical property substantially similar to a target cell, wherein the hydrogel particle comprises a polymerized monomer. The method further comprises measuring the at least one optical property of the hydrogel particle using the cytometric device. A sample comprising a plurality of cells is inserted into the cytometric device, and the at least one optical property of individual cells of the plurality are measured. Finally, a determination is made, based on the optical property measurement, whether the target cell or plurality thereof is present in the sample.


In one embodiment of the methods provided herein, the hydrogel particle comprises a biodegradable monomer. In some embodiments, biodegradable monomers and/or biocompatible particles are configured such that they can be used with and in sorting cells that are re-introduced into a biological system without presenting a risk if a particle also goes into the biological system. In a further embodiment, the biodegradable monomer is a monosaccharide, disaccharide, polysaccharide, peptide, protein, or protein domain. In even a further embodiment, the biodegradable monomer is functionalized with acrylamide or acrylate.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES


FIGS. 1A-I B illustrates the optical properties of disclosed hydrogel particles compared to polystyrene beads.



FIG. 2 depicts the process of producing labeled hydrogel particles of the disclosure.



FIGS. 3A-3C provides brightfield and fluorescent images of labeled hydrogel particles of the disclosure.



FIGS. 4A-4C illustrate the use of hydrogel particles of the disclosure as calibrants for cell types displaying a variety of optical scattering properties.



FIG. 5 provides dating showing correlation of inter-drop delay for a flow cytometer with hydrogel particle diameter.



FIG. 6 provides brightfield (6A and 6C) and fluorescent (6B and 6D) images of Chinese Hamster Ovary cells (6A and 6B) and hydrogel particles of the disclosure (6C and 6D).



FIG. 7 provides data showing comparison of human buccal cells to hydrogel particles encapsulating different amounts of DNA, as measured by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS).



FIG. 8 provides data for hydrogel particles encapsulating nanoparticles at different concentrations, demonstrating tuning of side scattering independent of forward scattering.



FIG. 9 provides data for hydrogel particles produced with different percentages of polymer, demonstrating tuning of refractive index measured by forward scattering.



FIG. 10 shows one embodiment of hydrogel parameter tuning to match and/or mimic desired cell population metrics.



FIGS. 11A-11D and 12A-12B are diagrams showing embodiments of how to adjust the forward scatter, side scatter and surface properties of a hydrogel particle.



FIG. 13A-13C are scatter plots for various hydrogel particles (A) and (B) and a commercial blood sample (C).





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The indefinite articles “a” and “an” and the definite article “the” are intended to include both the singular and the plural, unless the context in which they are used clearly indicates otherwise.


“At least one” and “one or more” are used interchangeably to mean that the article may include one or more than one of the listed elements.


Unless otherwise indicated, it is to be understood that all numbers expressing quantities, ratios, and numerical properties of ingredients, reaction conditions, and so forth, used in the specification and claims are contemplated to be able to be modified in all instances by the term “about”.


Several critical calibration measurements for flow cytometers require precise time resolution, such as setting the offset time between lasers, and calculating the delay time between detection and sorting of an object. Due to the fluidic conditions within the instrument, precise setting of these timing parameters requires the use of calibration particles that are the same size as the cells to be analyzed. Timing calibrations are typically performed using polystyrene beads with variable fluorescent intensities to calibrate the response of an excitation source and to set the inter-laser timing delay and sorting delay. Flow cytometers can also be calibrated using forward and side scatter signals which are general measures of size and granularity or complexity of the target sample. These calibrations are crucial for the accurate performance of the cytometer and for any downstream analysis or sorting of cell populations. The disclosed hydrogel particles exhibit timed scatter properties and are suitable for use as calibration reagents for a range of mammalian or bacterial cell types. Scattering is a standard metric for distinguishing cell types in heterogeneous mixtures for clinical, food safety, and research purposes.


Although polystyrene particles can be used to set inter-laser and sorting delays for some applications, many eukaryotic cell types fall outside of the size range of commercially available polystyrene particles (1-20 μm) making it nearly impossible to accurately calibrate a flow cytometer for these targets. Also, as shown in FIG. 1, polystyrene particles are fundamentally limited in the optical properties that can possess such as side scattering, which is a general measure of cellular complexity. Polystyrene particles are therefore limited in the two most important passive optical measurements used in flow cytometry: FSC (forward scattering), and SSC (side scattering) which measure the size and complexity of the target respectively. Due to these limitations of polystyrene, users must rely on purified cell lines to calibrate fluorescent intensity, inter-laser delay, sort delays, size and cellular complexity for experiments. This is a lengthy and labor-intensive process that increases the cost of flow cytometry validation and research pipelines significantly. More importantly, these calibration cell lines introduce biological variation, causing disparities in the interpretation of data.


Moreover, quality control (QC) for calibration of flow cytometers is also a crucial consideration when these instruments are used for clinical applications, for example, to isolate human T-regulatory cells or stem cells for downstream cellular therapies. The FDA mandates that the sterility, identity, purity, and potency of a cell therapy product be demonstrated before administration to patients (Riley et al. (2009). Immunity 30, pp. 656-665). Contamination of a cellular population with polystyrene QC particles could therefore be problematic, as polystyrene has been implicated in certain cancers. Additionally, a cellular population that is contaminated with a QC standard that is enzymatically degraded or digested internally after administration to a patient potentially overcomes contamination issues, should they arise.


The present invention addresses these and other needs, as discussed below.


In one aspect, a composition comprising a plurality of hydrogel particles is provided, wherein the individual hydrogel particles of the plurality each has one or more optical properties substantially similar to one or more optical properties of a target cell. Each of the individual hydrogel particles of the plurality independently comprises a hydrogel which is synthesized by polymerizing one or more monomers, i.e., to form a homopolymer or copolymer. As discussed further below, the use of bifunctional monomers allows for the further derivatization of hydrogels, e.g., with fluorescent dyes, cell surface markers or epitope binding fragments thereof, or a combination thereof. An example of hydrogel parameter tuning to meet/match desired cell subpopulation metrics is provided at FIG. 10. Methods for tuning the properties of a hydrogel are described herein. The ability to adjust a range of parameters including hydrogel components and concentration of the same allows for the ability to tune a particle to mimic a wide range of cells, for example one of the cell types described herein.


As provided above, in one aspect, the present invention provides individual hydrogel particles each having one or more optical properties substantially similar to one or more optical properties of a target cell. In one embodiment, the one or more optical properties, is a side scatter profile, a forward scatter profile or a secondary marker profile, such as a fluorescence marker profile, for example a fluorescence marker profile of a fluorescently-labeled antibody that binds to the surface of the hydrogel particle. “Substantially similar,” as used herein, denotes at least 40% similar, at least 50% similar, at least 60% similar, at least 70% similar, at least 80% similar, at least 90% similar, at least 95% similar, at least 96% similar, at least 97% similar, at least 98% similar or at least 99% similar.


The present invention is based in part on the unexpected discovery that one or more optical properties of a hydrogel particle can be independently modulated by altering the composition of the hydrogel particle, for example, by altering the amount of initial monomer (or co-monomer) in the composition, by altering the surface functionalization, by altering the amount of a polymerization initiator or by altering the amount of crosslinker. For example, side scattering (SSC) can be modulated without substantially affecting forward scattering (FSC), and vice versa. Furthermore, the optical properties (e.g. refractive index) of hydrogel particles can be tuned without having a substantial effect on density of the particle. This is a surprising and useful feature, as hydrogel particles that serve as surrogates for cells in cytometric methods such as flow cytometry or (fluorescence-activated cell sorting) FACS require a minimal density in order to function in those assays.


In another aspect, a method for producing a hydrogel particle is provided, wherein the hydrogel particle has one or more optical properties substantially similar to the optical properties of one or more target cells. In one embodiment, the hydrogel particle has pre-determined optical properties. The optical property, in one embodiment, is SSC, FSC, fluorescence emission, or a combination thereof.


In yet another aspect, a method of calibrating a cytometric device for analysis of a target cell is provided. In one embodiment, the method comprises (a) inserting into the device a hydrogel particle having optical properties substantially similar to the optical properties of the target cell; b) measuring the optical properties of the hydrogel particle using the cytometric device, thereby calibrating the cytometric device for analysis of the target cell. Cytometric devices are known in the art, and include commercially available devices for performing flow cytometry and FACS.


As provided above, in one aspect of the invention, compositions comprising a plurality of hydrogel particles are provided. A hydrogel is a material comprising a macromolecular three-dimensional network that allows it to swell when in the presence of water, to shrink in the absence of (or by reduction of the amount of) water, but not dissolve in water. The swelling, i.e., the absorption of water, is a consequence of the presence of hydrophilic functional groups attached to or dispersed within the macromolecular network. Crosslinks between adjacent macromolecules result in the aqueous insolubility of these hydrogels. The cross-links may be due to chemical (i.e., covalent) or physical (i.e., VanDer Waal forces, hydrogen-bonding, ionic forces, etc.) bonds. Synthetically prepared hydrogels can be prepared by polymerizing a monomeric material to form a backbone and cross-linking the backbone with a crosslinking agent. As referred to herein, the term “hydrogel” refers to the macromolecular material whether dehydrated or in a hydrated state. A characteristic of a hydrogel that is of particular value is that the material retains the general shape, whether dehydrated or hydrated. Thus, if the hydrogel has an approximately spherical shape in the dehydrated condition, it will be spherical in the hydrated condition.


In one embodiment, a hydrogel particle disclosed herein comprises greater than about 30%, greater than about 40%, greater than about 50%, greater than about 55%, greater than about 60%, greater than about 65%, greater than about 70%, greater than about 75%, greater than about 80%, greater than about 85%, greater than about 90%, or greater than about 95% water. In another embodiment, a hydrogel particle has a water content of about 10 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight, or about 20 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight, or about 30 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight, or about 40 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight, or about 50 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight, or about 60 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight, or about 70 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight, or about 80 percent by weight to about 95 percent by weight.


The hydrogels provided herein, in the form of particles, are synthesized by polymerizing one or more of the monomers provided herein. The synthesis is carried out to form individual hydrogel particles. The monomeric material (monomer) in one embodiment is polymerized to form a homopolymer. However, in another embodiment copolymers of different monomeric units (i.e., co-monomers) are synthesized and used in the methods provided herein. The monomer or co-monomers used in the methods and compositions described herein, in one embodiment, is a bifunctional monomer or includes a bifunctional monomer (where co-monomers are employed). In one embodiment, the hydrogel is synthesized in the presence of a crosslinker. In a further embodiment, embodiment, the hydrogel is synthesized in the presence of a polymerization initiator.


The amount of monomer can be varied by the user of the invention, for example to obtain a particular optical property that is substantially similar to that of a target cell. In one embodiment, the monomeric component(s)(i.e., monomer, co-monomer, bifunctional monomer, or a combination thereof, for example, bis/acrylamide in various crosslinking ratios, allyl amine or other co-monomers which provide chemical functionality for secondary labeling/conjugation or alginate is present at about 10 percent by weight to about 95 percent weight of the hydrogel, in a further embodiment, the monomeric component(s) is present at about 15 percent by weight to about 90 percent weight of the hydrogel, or about 20 percent by weight to about 90 percent weight of the hydrogel.


Examples of various monomers and cross-linking chemistries available for use with the present invention are provided in the Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology.” (available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes. For example, hydrazine (e.g., with an NHS ester compound) or EDC coupling reactions (e.g., with a maleimide compound) can be used to construct the hydrogels of the invention.


In one embodiment, a monomer for use with the hydrogels provided herein is lactic acid, glycolic acid, acrylic acid, 1-hydroxyethyl methacrylate, ethyl methacrylate, 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA), propylene glycol methacrylate, acrylamide, N-vinylpyrrolidone (NVP), methyl methacrylate, glycidyl methacrylate, glycerol methacrylate (GMA), glycol methacrylate, ethylene glycol, fumaric acid, a derivatized version thereof, or a combination thereof.


In one embodiment, one or more of the following monomers is used herein to form a hydrogel of the present invention: 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate, hydroxyethoxyethyl methacrylate, hydroxydiethoxyethyl methacrylate, methoxyethyl methacrylate, methoxyethoxyethyl methacrylate, methoxydiethoxyethyl methacrylate, poly(ethylene glycol) methacrylate, methoxy-poly(ethylene glycol) methacrylate, methacrylic acid, sodium methacrylate, glycerol methacrylate, hydroxypropyl methacrylate, hydroxybutyl methacrylate or a combination thereof.


In another embodiment, one or more of the following monomers is used herein to form a tunable hydrogel: phenyl acrylate, phenyl methacrylate, benzyl acrylate, benzyl methacrylate, 2-phenylethyl acrylate, 2-phenylethyl methacrylate, 2-phenoxyethyl acrylate, 2-phenoxyethyl methacrylate, phenylthioethyl acrylate, phenylthioethyl methacrylate, 2,4,6-tribromophenyl acrylate, 2,4,6-tribromophenyl methacrylate, pentabromophenyl acrylate, pentabromophenyl methacrylate, pentachlorophenyl acrylate, pentachlorophenyl methacrylate, 2,3-dibromopropyl acrylate, 2,3-dibromopropyl methacrylate, 2-naphthyl acrylate, 2-naphthyl methacrylate, 4-methoxybenzyl acrylate, 4-methoxybenzyl methacrylate, 2-benzyloxyethyl acrylate, 2-benzyloxyethyl methacrylate, 4-chlorophenoxyethyl acrylate, 4-chlorophenoxyethyl methacrylate, 2-phenoxyethoxyethyl acrylate, 2-phenoxyethoxyethyl methacrylate. N-phenyl acrylamide, N-phenyl methacrylamide. N-benzyl acrylamide, N-benzyl methacrylamide, N,N-dibenzyl acrylamide, N,N-dibenzyl methacrylamide, N-diphenylmethyl acrylamide N-(4-methylphenyl)methyl acrylamide, N-1-naphthyl acrylamide, N-4-nitrophenyl acrylamide, N-(2-phenylethyl)acrylamide, N-triphenylmethyl acrylamide. N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acrylamide. N,N-methylphenyl acrylamide, N,N-phenyl phenylethyl acrylamide, N-diphenylmethyl methacrylamide, N-(4-methyl phenyl)methyl methacrylamide, N-1-naphthyl methacrylamide, N-4-nitrophenyl methacrylamide. N-(2-phenylethyl)methacrylamide, N-triphenylmethyl methacrylamide, N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)methacrylamide. N,N-methylphenyl methacrylamide, N,N′-phenyl phenylethyl methacrylamide, N-vinylcarbazole, 4-vinylpyridine, 2-vinylpyridine, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,657,030, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein for all purposes.


Both synthetic monomers and bio-monomers can be used in the hydrogels provided herein, to form synthetic hydrogels, bio-hydrogels, or hybrid hydrogels that comprise a synthetic component and a bio-component (e.g., peptide, protein, monosaccharide, disaccharide, polysaccharide, primary amines sulfhydryls, carbonyls, carbohydrates, carboxylic acids present on a biolmolecule). For example, proteins, peptides or carbohydrates can be used as individual monomers to form a hydrogel that includes or does not include a synthetic monomer (or polymer) and in combination with chemically compatible co-monomers and crosslinking chemistries (see for example, the Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology,” available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes). Compatible crosslinking chemistries include, but are not limited to, amines, carboxyls, and other reactive chemical side groups. Representative reactive groups amenable for use in the hydrogels and monomers described herein are provided in Table 1, below.









TABLE 1







Crosslinker reactive groups amenable for bio-monomer conjugation










Target




functional


Reactivity class
group
Reactive chemical group





Amine reactive
—NH2
NHS ester




Imidoester




Penafluorophenyl ester




Hydroxymethyl phosphine


Carboxyl-to-amine reactive
—COOH
Carbodiimide (e.g., EDC)


Sulfhydryl-reactive
—SH
Maeleimide




Haloacetyl




(bromo- or iodo-)




Pyridylisulfide




Thiosulfonate




Vinylsulfonate


Aldehyde-reactive (oxidized
—CHO
Hydrazine


sugars, carbonyls)

Alkoxyamine


Photo-reactive, i.e.,
Random
Diazirine


nonselective, random insertion

Aryl azide


Hydroxyl (nonaqueous)-reactive
—OH
Isocyanate


Azide-reactive
—N3
phosphine









In general, any form of polymerization chemistry/methods commonly known by those skilled in the art, can be employed to form polymers. In some embodiments, polymerization can be catalyzed by ultraviolet light-induced radical formation and reaction progression. In other embodiments, a hydrogel particle of the disclosure is produced by the polymerization of acrylamide or the polymerization of acrylate. For example, the acrylamide in one embodiment is a polymerizable carbohydrate derivatized acrylamide as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,107,365, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes. As described therein and known to those of ordinary skill in the art, specific attachment of acrylamide groups to sugars is readily adapted to a range of monosaccharides and higher order polysaccharides. e.g., synthetic polysaccharides or polysaccharides derived from natural sources, such as glycoproteins found in serum or tissues.


In one embodiment, an acrylate-functionalized poly(ethylene) glycol monomer is used as a hydrogel monomer. For example, the PEG in one embodiment is an acrylate or acrylamide functionalized PEG.


In some embodiments, a hydrogel particle comprises a monofunctional monomer polymerized with at least one bifunctional monomer. One example includes, but is not limited to, the formation of poly-acrylamide polymers using acrylamide and bis-acrylamide (a bifunctional monomer). In another embodiment, a hydrogel particle provided herein comprises a bifunctional monomer polymerized with a second bifunctional monomer. One example include, but is not limited to, the formation of polymers with mixed composition containing compatible chemistries such as acrylamide, bis-acrylamide, and bis-acrylamide structural congeners containing a wide range of additional chemistries. The range of chemically compatible monomers, bifunctional monomers, and mixed compositions is obvious to those skilled in the art and follows chemical reactivity principles know to those skilled in the art. (reference Thermo handbook and acrylamide polymerization handbook). See, for example, the Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology,” (available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf) and the Polyacrylamide Emulsions Handbook (SNF Floerger, available at snf.com.au/downloads/Emulsion_Handbook_E.pdf), the disclosure of each of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.


In one embodiment, a hydrogel particle provided herein comprises a polymerizable monofunctional monomer and is a monofunctional acrylic monomer. Non-limiting examples of monofunctional acrylic monomers for use herein are acrylamide; methacrylamide, N-alkylacrylamides such as N-ethylacrylamide, N-isopropylacrylamide or N-tertbutylacrylamide; N-alkylmethacrylamides such as N-ethylmethyacrylamide or Nisopropylmethacrylamide; N,N-dialkylacrylamides such as N,N-dimethylacrylamide and N,N-diethyl-acrylamide; N-[(dialkylamino)alkyl] acrylamides such as N-[3dimethylamino) propyl]acrylamide or N-[3-(diethylamino)propyl] acrylamide; N-[(dialkylamino) alkyl] methacrylamides such as N-[3-dimethylamino)propyl] methacrylamide or N-[3-(diethylamino) propyl] methacrylamide; (dialkylamino)alkyl acrylates such as 2-(dimethylamino)ethyl acrylate, 2-(dimethylamino)propyl acrylate, or 2-(diethylamino)ethyl acrylates; and (dialkylamino) alkyl methacrylates such as 2-(dimethylamino) ethyl methacrylate.


A bifunctional monomer is any monomer that can polymerize with a monofunctional monomer of the disclosure to form a hydrogel as described herein that further contains a second functional group that can participate in a second reaction, e.g., conjugation of a fluorophore or cell surface receptor (or domain thereof).


In some embodiments, a bifunctional monomer is selected from the group consisting of: allyl amine, allyl alcohol, allyl isothiocyanate, allyl chloride, and allyl maleimide.


A bifunctional monomer can be a bifunctional acrylic monomer. Non-limiting examples of bifunctional acrylic monomers are N,N′-methylenebisacrylamide, N,N′methylene bismethacrylamide, N,N′-ethylene bisacrylamide. N,N′-ethylene bismethacrylamide, N,N′propylenebisacrylamide and N,N′-(1,2-dihydroxyethylene) bisacrylamide.


Higher-order branched chain and linear co-monomers can be substituted in the polymer mix to adjust the refractive index while maintaining polymer density, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,657,030, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.


In some embodiments, a hydrogel comprises a molecule that modulates the optical properties of the hydrogel. Molecules capable of altering optical properties of a hydrogel are discussed further below.


In one embodiment, an individual hydrogel particle or a plurality thereof comprises a biodegradable polymer as a hydrogel monomer. In one embodiment, the biodegradable polymer is a poly(esters) based on polylactide (PLA), polyglycolide (PGA), polycaprolactone (PCL), and their copolymers. In one embodiment, the biodegradable polymer is a carbohydrate or a protein, or a combination thereof. For example, in one embodiment, a monosaccharide, disaccharide or polysaccharide. (e.g., glucose, sucrose, or maltodextrin) peptide, protein (or domain thereof) is used as a hydrogel monomer. Other biodegradable polymers include poly(hydroxyalkanoate)s of the PHB-PHV class, additional poly(ester)s, and natural polymers, for example, modified poly(saccharide)s, e.g., starch, cellulose, and chitosan. In another embodiment, the biocompatible polymer is an adhesion protein, cellulose, a carbohydrate, a starch (e.g., maltodextrin, 2-hydroxyethyl starch, alginic acid), a dextran, a lignin, a polyaminoacid, an amino acid, or chitin. Such biodegradable polymers are available commercially, for example, from Sigma Aldrich (St. Louis. MO).


The protein in one embodiment comprises only natural amino acids. However, the invention is not limited thereto. For example, self-assembling artificial proteins and proteins with non-natural amino acids (e.g., those incorporated into non-ribosomal peptides or synthetically introduced via synthetic approaches, see for example, Zhang et al. (2013). Current Opinion in Structural Biology 23, pp. 581-587, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes), or protein domains thereof, can also be used as hydrogel monomers. The range of non-natural (unnatural) amino acids that can be incorporated into such compositions is well known to those skilled in the art (Zhang et al. (2013). Current Opinion in Structural Biology 23, pp. 581-587; incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes). The biodegradable polymer in one embodiment, is used as a co-monomer, i.e., in a mixture of monomers. The biodegradable polymer in one embodiment is a bifunctional monomer.


The biomonomer, in one embodiment, is functionalized with acrylamide or acrylate. For example, in one embodiment, the polymerizable acrylamide functionalized biomolecule is an acrylamide or acrylate functionalized protein (for example, an acrylamide functionalized collagen or functionalized collagen domain), an acrylamide or acrylate functionalized peptide, or an acrylamide or acrylate functionalized monosaccharide, disaccharide or polysaccharide.


Any monosaccharide, disaccharide or polysaccharide (functionalized or otherwise) can be used as a hydrogel monomer. In one embodiment, an acrylamide or acrylate functionalized monosaccharide, disaccharide or polysaccharide is used as a polymerizable hydrogel monomer. In one embodiment, a structural polysaccharide is used as a polymerizable hydrogel monomer. In a further embodiment, the structural polysaccharide is an arabinoxylan, cellulose, chitin or a pectin. In another embodiment, alginic acid (alginate) is used as a polymerizable hydrogel monomer. In yet another embodiment, a glycosaminoglycan (GAG) is used as a polymerizable monomer in the hydrogels provided herein. In a further embodiment, the GAG is chondroitin sulfate, dermatan sulfate, keratin sulfate, heparin, heparin sulfate or hyaluronic acid (also referred to in the art as hyaluron or hyaluronate) is used as a polymerizable hydrogel monomer. The additional range of compatible biomonomers and their reactive chemistries are known be individuals skilled in the art and follow general chemical reactivity principles.


An additional range of biocompatible monomers that can be incorporated are known in the art, see, for example the non-degradable biocompatible monomers disclosed in Shastri (2003). Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology 4, pp. 331-337, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all purposes. Other monomers are provided in de Moraes Porto (2012). Polymer Biocompatibility, Polymerization. Dr. Ailton De Souza Gomes (Ed.), ISBN: 978-953-51-0745-3; InTech, DOI: 10.5772/47786; Heller et al. (2010). Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry 49, pp. 650-661; Final Report for Biocompatible Materials (2004). The Board of the Biocompatible Materials and the Molecular Engineering in Polymer Science programmes. ISBN 91-631-4985-0, the disclosure of each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.


Biocompatible monomers for use with the hydrogels described herein include in one embodiment, ethyleglycol dimethacrylate (EGDMA), 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA), methylnethacrylte (MMA), methacryloxymethyltrimethylsilanc (TMS-MA), N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidon (N-VP), styrene, or a combination thereof.


Naturally occurring hydrogels useful in this invention include various polysaccharides available from natural sources such as plants, algae, fungi, yeasts, marine invertebrates and arthropods. Non-limiting examples include agarose, dextrans, chitin, cellulose-based compounds, starch, derivatized starch, and the like. These generally will have repeating glucose units as a major portion of the polysaccharide backbone. Cross-linking chemistries for such polysaccharides are known in the art, see for example Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology,” (available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf).


Hyaluronan in one embodiment is used as a hydrogel monomer (either as a single monomer or as a co-monomer). Hyaluronan in one embodiment, is functionalized, for example with acrylate or acrylamide. Hyaluronan is a high molecular weight GAG composed of disaccharide repeating units of N-acetylglucosamine and glucuronic acid linked together through alternating β-1,4 and β-1,3 glycosidic bonds. In the human body, hyaluronate is found in several soft connective tissues, including skin, umbilical cord, synovial fluid, and vitreous humor. Accordingly, in one embodiment, where one or more optical properties of a skin cell, umbilical cord cell or vitreous humor cell is desired to be mimicked, in one embodiment, hyaluronan is used as a hydrogel monomer. Methods for fabricating hydrogel particles are described in Xu el al. (2012). Soft Matter. 8, pp. 3280-3294, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety for all purposes. As described therein, hyaluronan can be derivatized with various reactive handles depending on the desired cross-linking chemistry and other monomers used to form a hydrogel particle.


In yet other embodiments, chitosan, a linear polysaccharide composed of randomly distributed β-(1-4)-linked D-glucosamine (deacetylated unit) and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (acetylated unit), is used as a hydrogel monomer (either as a single monomer or as a co-monomer).


Other polysaccharides for use as a hydrogel monomer or co-monomer include but are not limited to, agar, agarose, alginic acid, alguronic acid, alpha glucan, amylopectin, amylose, arabinoxylan, beta-glucan, callose, capsullan, carrageenan polysaccharides (e.g., kappa, iota or lambda class), cellodextrin, cellulin, cellulose, chitin, chitosan, chrysolaminarin, curdlan, cyclodextrin, alpha-cyclodextrin, dextrin, ficoll, fructan, fucoidan, galactoglucomannan, galactomannan, galactosaminogalactan, gellan gum, glucan, glucomannan, glucorunoxylan, glycocalyx, glycogen, hemicellulose, homopolysaccharide, hypromellose, icodextrin, inulin, kefiran, laminarin, lentinan, levan polysaccharide, lichenin, mannan, mixed-linkage glucan, paramylon, pectic acid, pectin, pentastarch, phytoglycogen, pleuran, polydextrose, polysaccharide peptide, porphyran, pullulan, schizophyllan, sinistrin, sizofiran, welan gun, xanthan gum, xylan, xyloglucan, zymosan, or a combination thereof. As described throughout, depending on the desired cross-linking chemistry and/or additional co-monomers employed in the hydrogel, the polysaccharide can be further functionalized. For example, one or more of the polysaccharides described herein in one embodiment is functionalized with acrylate or acrylamide.


In one embodiment, an individual hydrogel particle or a plurality thereof comprises a peptide, protein, a protein domain, or a combination thereof as a hydrogel monomer or plurality thereof. In a further embodiment, the protein is a structural protein, or a domain thereof, for example, such as silk, elastin, titin or collagen, or a domain thereof. In one embodiment, the protein is an extracellular matrix (ECM) component (e.g., collagen, elastin, proteoglycan). In even a further embodiment, the structural protein is collagen. In yet a further embodiment, the collagen is collagen type I, collagen type II or collagen type III or a combination thereof. In another embodiment, the hydrogel monomer comprises a proteoglycan. In a further embodiment, the proteoglycan is decorin, biglycan, testican, bikunin, fibromodulin, lumican, or a domain thereof.


In another embodiment, an acrylate-functionalized structural protein hydrogel monomer is used as a component of the hydrogel provided herein (e.g., an acrylate functionalized protein or protein domain, for example, silk, elastin, titin, collagen, proteoglycan, or a functionalized domain thereof). In a further embodiment, the acrylate functionalized structural protein hydrogel monomer comprises a proteoglycan, e.g., decorin, biglycan, testican, bikunin, fibromodulin, lumican, or a domain thereof.


In one embodiment PEG monomers and oligopeptides can be that mimic extracellular matrix proteins are used in the hydrogels provided herein, for example, with vinyl sulfone-functionalized multiarm PEG, integrin binding peptides and bis-cysteine matrix metalloproteinase peptides as described by Lutolf et al. (2003). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 5413-5418, incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes. In this particular embodiment, hydrogels are formed by a Michael-type addition reaction between the di-thiolated oligopeptides and vinyl sulfone groups on the PEG. The range of additional compatible chemistries that can be incorporated here are obvious to those skilled in the art and follow general chemical reactivity principles, see for example Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology,” (available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf).


Other bioactive domains in natural proteins can also be used as a hydrogel monomer or portion thereof. For example, a cell-adhesive integrin binding domain, a controlled release affinity binding domain or a transglutaminase cross-linking domain can be used in the hydrogels provided herein. Details for producing such hydrogels can be found in Martino et al. (2009). Biomaterials 30, 1089; Martino el al. (2011). Sci. Trans. Med. 3, 100ra89; Hu and Messersmith (2003). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125, 14298, each of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.


In one embodiment, recombinant DNA methods are used to create proteins, designed to gel in response to changes in pH or temperature, for example, by the methods described by Petka et al. (1998). Science 281. pp. 389-392, incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes. Briefly, the proteins consist of terminal leucine zipper domains flanking a water-soluble polyelectrolyte segment. In near-neutral aqueous solutions, coiled-coil aggregates of the terminal domains form a three-dimensional hydrogel polymer network.


Common cross linking agents that can be used to crosslink the hydrogels provided herein include but are not limited to ethylene glycol dimethacrylate (EGDMA), tetraethylene glycol dimethacrylate, and N,N′-15 methylenebisacrylamide. The range of additional crosslinking chemistries which can be used are obvious to those skilled in the art and follow general chemical reactivity principles, see for example Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology.” (available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf).


In one embodiment, polymerization of a hydrogel is initiated by a persulfate or an equivalent initiator that catalyzes radical formation. The range of compatible initiators are known to those skilled in the art and follow general chemical reactivity principles, see for example Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology,” (available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf). The persulfate can be any water-soluble persulfate. Non-limiting examples of water soluble persulfates are ammonium persulfate and alkali metal persulfates. Alkali metals include lithium, sodium and potassium. In some embodiments, the persulfate is ammonium persulfate or potassium persulfate. In a further embodiment, polymerization of the hydrogel provided herein is initiated by ammonium persulfate.


Polymerization of a hydrogel can be accelerated by an accelerant which can catalyze the formation of polymerization-labile chemical side groups. The range of possible accelerants is known to those skilled in the art and follow general chemical reactivity principles see for example Thermo Scientific Crosslinking Technical Handbook entitled “Easy molecular bonding crosslinking technology,” (available at tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/brochures/1602163-Crosslinking-Reagents-Handbook.pdf). The accelerant in one embodiment, is a tertiary amine. The tertiary amine can be any water-soluble tertiary amine. In one embodiment, an accelerant is used in the polymerisation reaction and is N,N,N′,N′tetramethylethylenediamine, 3-dimethylamino) propionitrile, or N,N,N′,N′tetramethylethylenediamine (TEMED). In another embodiment, an accelerant is used in the polymerization reaction and isazobis (isobutyronitrile) (AIBN).


As discussed above, the hydrogel for use in the compositions and methods described herein can include any of the monomeric units and crosslinkers as described herein, and in one aspect, are produced as hydrogel particles by polymerizing droplets (see, e.g., FIG. 2). Microfluidic methods of producing a plurality of droplets, including fluidic and rigidified droplets, are known to those of ordinary skill in the art, and described in US Patent Publication No. 2011/0218123 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,294,503, each incorporated herein by reference in their entireties for all purposes. Such methods provide for a plurality of droplets containing a first fluid and being substantially surrounded by a second fluid, where the first fluid and the second fluid are substantially immiscible (e.g., droplets containing an aqueous-based liquid being substantially surrounded by an oil based liquid).


A plurality of fluidic droplets (e.g., prepared using a microfluidic device) may be polydisperse (e.g., having a range of different sizes), or in some cases, the fluidic droplets may be monodisperse or substantially monodisperse, e.g., having a homogenous distribution of diameters, for instance, such that no more than about 10%, about 5%, about 3%, about 1%, about 0.03%, or about 0.01% of the droplets have an average diameter greater than about 10%, about 5%, about 3%, about 1%, about 0.03%, or about 0.01% of the average diameter. The average diameter of a population of droplets, as used herein, refers to the arithmetic average of the diameters of the droplets. Average diameters of the particles can be measured, for example, by light scattering techniques. Average diameters of hydrogel particles in one embodiment, are tailored, for example by varying flow rates of the fluid streams of the first and second fluids within the channel(s) of a microfluidic device, or by varying the volume of the channel(s) of the microfluidic device.


Accordingly, the disclosure provides population of hydrogel particles comprising a plurality of hydrogel particles, wherein the population of hydrogel particles is substantially monodisperse.


The term microfluidic refers to a device, apparatus or system including at least one fluid channel having a cross-sectional dimension of less than 1 mm, and a ratio of length to largest cross-sectional dimension perpendicular to the channel of at least about 3:1. A micro fluidic device comprising a micro fluidic channel is especially well suited to preparing a plurality of mono disperse droplets.


Non-limiting examples of microfluidic systems that may be used with the present invention are disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2006/0163385: U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2005/0172476; U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2007/000342: International Patent Application Publication No. WO 2006/096571; U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2007/0054119: U.S. Pat. No. 7,776,927: and International Patent Application Publication No. WO 2006/078841, each incorporated herein by reference in their entireties for all purposes.


Droplet size is related to microfluidic channel size. The micro fluidic channel may be of any size, for example, having a largest dimension perpendicular to fluid flow of less than about 5 mm or 2 mm, or less than about 1 mm, or less than about 500 μm, less than about 200 μm, less than about 100 μm, less than about 60 μm, less than about 50 μm, less than about 40 μm, less than about 30 μm, less than about 25 μm, less than about 10 μm, less than about 3 μm, less than about 1 μm, less than about 300 un, less than about 100 nm, less than about 30 nm, or less than about 10 nm.


Droplet size can be tuned by adjusting the relative flow rates. In some embodiments, drop diameters are equivalent to the width of the channel, or within about 10%, 15%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, or 100% the width of the channel.


The dimensions of a hydrogel particle of the disclosure are substantially similar to the droplet from which it was formed. Therefore, in some embodiments, a hydrogel particle has a diameter of less than about 1 μm, 2, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, 450, 500, 600, 800, or less than 1000 μm in diameter. In some embodiments, a hydrogel particle has a diameter of more than about 1 μm, 2, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, 450, 500, 600, 800, or greater than 1000 μm in diameter. In one embodiment, a hydrogel particle has a diameter in the range of 5 μm to 100 μm.


In some embodiments, a hydrogel particle of the disclosure is spherical in shape.


In some embodiments, a hydrogel particle of the disclosure does not comprise agarose.


Hydrogel particles in one embodiment, is carried by suspension polymerization, which is also referred to in the art as pearl, bead or granular polymerization (see Elbert (2011). Acta Biomater. 7, pp. 31-56, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all purposes). In suspension polymerization, the monomer is insoluble in the continuous phase, for example an aqueous monomer solution in a continuous oil phase. In suspension polymerization, polymerization initiation occurs within the monomer-rich droplets and with greater than one radical per droplet at any time. The monomer phase in one embodiment includes a monomer which can be a bifunctional monomer or a plurality of monomer species (co-monomers, which can be a plurality of bifunctional monomers. The monomer phase in one embodiment, includes an initiator and/or a crosslinking agent.


Emulsion polymerization can also be used to form the hydrogel particles described herein. In emulsion polymerization, the monomer has poor solubility in the continuous phase, similar to suspension polymerization, however, polymerization initiation occurs outside the monomer droplets (see Elbert (2011). Ada Biomater, 7, pp. 31-56, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all purposes). In emulsion polymerization embodiments, the initiator causes chain growth of the monomer (or co-monomers) dissolved in the continuous phase or monomer contained in micelles if surfactants are present.


In another embodiment, hydrogel particles are formed by precipitation polymerization, for example as described in Elbert (2011). Acta Biomater. 7, pp. 31-56, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all purposes. Precipitation polymerization is a technique that takes advantage of the differences in the solubility of monomer and polymer to produce microparticles. Specifically, it is known that larger polymer chains generally have lower solubility than smaller ones. Accordingly, above a specific molecular weight, phase separation may be favored. Precipitation polymerization initially begins as solution polymerizations in a single phase, homogenous system. Shortly after the start of the polymerization, in one embodiment, a relatively high concentration of polymer chains is present, favoring phase separation by nucleation. As polymerization proceeds, the concentration of polymer chains is low and existing particles capture the chains before nucleation or new particles can occur. Thus, nucleation of particles occurs only for a brief period of time shortly after the start or the reaction, which in one embodiment, results in a narrow size distribution or particles. Additional methods include but are not limited to lithographic particle formation (Helgeson et al. (2011). Curr. Opin. Colloid. Interlace Sci. 16. pp. 106-117, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all purposes) membrane emulsification (e.g., by the micosieve emulsification technology techniques described by Nanomi B. V. (Netherlands)) and microchannel emulsification (Sugiura et al. (2002). Languimuir 18. pp. 5708-5712, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety) and bulk emulsification (SNF Floerger, available at snf.com.au/downloads/Emulsion_Handbook_E.pdf, incorporated by reference herein in its entirely).


In one embodiment, hydrogel particles are formed within a microfluidic device having two oil channels that focus on a central stream of aqueous monomer solution. In this embodiment, droplets form at the interface of the two channels and central stream to break off droplets in water-in-oil emulsion. Once droplets are formed, in one embodiment, they are stabilized prior to polymerization, for example, by adding a surfactant to the oil phase. However, in another embodiment, droplets are not stabilized prior to polymerization. Polymerization of the monomer in one embodiment is triggered by adding an accelerator (e.g., N,N,N′,N′tetramethylethylenediamine) to one or both of the oil channels after initial droplets are formed.


The aqueous monomer solution as provided above can include a single monomer species or a plurality of monomer species. The aqueous monomer solution can include co-monomers, a bifunctional monomer or a combination thereof. In one embodiment, the monomer or plurality of monomers can includes a bifunctional monomer, for example, one of the monomers described above. As described below, co-monomers can be used to modulate forward scatter or side scatter, for example, by adjusting the refractive index of the hydrogel particle.


In one embodiment, the central stream of aqueous monomer solution comprises a cross-linker, for example, N,N′-bisacrylamide. In a further embodiment, the central stream of aqueous monomer solution comprises a cross-linker and an accelerator, in addition to the monomer. In yet a further embodiment, the aqueous monomer solution comprises an initiator, for example an oxidizing agent such as ammonium persulfate.


Forward scatter was modulated by adjusting the refractive index of the gel by adding co-monomers allyl acrylate and allyl methacrylate (see also FIGS. 11 and 12). Forward scatter can also be modulated with side scattering nanoparticles containing sufficient optical resolution/size/density including, but not limited to, higher density colloidal suspensions of silica and/or PMMA particles. Side scattering of the droplets was tuned by adding a colloidal suspension or silica nanoparticles and/or PMMA (poly(methyl methacrylate)) particles (100 nm) to the central aqueous phase prior to polymerization (FIGS. 11 and 12).


In one embodiment, a bead, plurality of beads, biomolecule, or plurality of biomolecules is embedded (encapsulated) within the hydrogel particle. An encapsulated bead or biomolecule, in one embodiment, is employed to mimic one or more intracellular organelles of a target cell, or a cell after it engulfs a particle. In one embodiment, encapsulating or embedding a bead or biomolecule is accomplished at the time of hydrogel particle formation. For example, beads can be suspended in the appropriate concentration to allow for an average of one bead to be embedded/encapsulated in a single hydrogel particle. The bead suspension can be included, for example, within the aqueous solution or monomer. Similarly, a biomolecule or mixture of biomolecules can be incorporated into the aqueous solution of monomer to encapsulate the biomolecule or biomolecules.


Alternatively, once a hydrogel particle is formed, for example by the methods described above, in one embodiment, it can be further manipulated, for example, by embedding a bead, plurality of beads, biomolecule or plurality of biomolecules within the hydrogel particle.


Accordingly, in one aspect of the invention, a hydrogel comprising an embedded substance is provided.


In one embodiment, the embedded substance is an embedded molecule, for example a biomolecule. The biomolecule can be a single species or a plurality of different species. For example, a protein, peptide, carbohydrate, nucleic acid or combination thereof can be encapsulated within a hydrogel particle of the invention. Moreover, different nucleic acid molecules (e.g., of varying sequences or nucleic acid type such as genomic DNA, messenger RNA or DNA-RNA hybrids) can be encapsulated by the hydrogel particle of the invention. These can be comprised of any protein or nucleic acid as both forms of biological material contain labile chemical side-groups (or can be modified by commercial vendors (e.g., Integrated DNA Technology chemical side group modifications). Such side-groups are compatible with reaction chemistries commonly found in co-monomer compositions (e.g. acrylate chemistry, NHS-ester, primary amines, copper catalyzed click chemistry (Sharpless)). The range of possible embedded molecules which contain compatible chemistries is understood by those skilled in the art.


In one embodiment, different subpopulations of hydrogel particles are fabricated, each with a different concentration of biomolecule. In a further embodiment, the biomolecule is a nucleic acid, a protein, an intracellular ion such as calcium acid (or other biomolecule of the user's choosing, for example, calcium). In another embodiment, different subpopulations of hydrogel particles are fabricated, each with a different concentration of a drug substance. The drug substance in one embodiment is a biomolecule (i.e., a biologic, antibody, antibody drug conjugate, protein/enzyme, peptide, non-ribosomal peptide, or related molecule) or a small molecule synthetic drug (e.g., Type I/II/III polyketide, non-ribosomal peptide with bioactive properties, or other small molecule entity as generally classified by those skilled in the art).


In this regard, the present invention is particularly useful for determining assay resolution where cells are stained for their respective nucleic acid or protein content. In one embodiment, different populations of the hydrogel particles provided herein are encapsulated with known, differing amounts of an intracellular substance, e.g., nucleic acid or protein. Individual hydrogel particles are stained for the intracellular substance and fluorescence is measured via a cytometric device for the individual hydrogels of the various populations. This allows for a generation of a standard curve to establish the sensitivity and dynamic range of the intracellular assay. Once established, a sample can be run through the cytometer to detect target cell(s) if present, and to quantify the amount of intracellular substance in the respective target cell(s). In one embodiment, the embedded substance is an infectious disease biomarker, for example one of the infectious disease biomarkers in the Infectious Disease Biomarker Database (IDBD, see Yang et al. (2008) IDBD: Infectious Disease Biomarker Database. Nucleic Acid Res. 36, pp. D455-D460, incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes). In a further embodiment, the infectious disease biomarker is a biomarker of gastrointestinal infection, respiratory infection, neurological infection, urogenital infection, viral infection, hemorrhagic fever, zoonosis, arbovirus, antibiotics resistance or bioterrorism. In a further embodiment, the viral infection is an Ebola infection.


In one embodiment, the methods provided herein are used to determine the sensitivity and/or dynamic range of a cellular nucleic acid quantification assay. In this embodiment, a sample is interrogated for cell types within the sample (if present), and amount of cellular nucleic acid within the cell.


In another embodiment, the present invention provides a means for determining the resolution and/or sensitivity of an intracellular protein quantification assay. Hydrogel particles, in one embodiment, encapsulate known amounts of protein, at various concentrations, and subsequently stained with the appropriate protein antibody. Fluorescence is measured for the various particles to determine the sensitivity and/or dynamic range of the assay. The fluorescence values can then be compared to the values obtained from cells in a sample, to determine whether a target cell is present and whether it contains the intracellular protein, and the amount of the protein.


In one embodiment, individual hydrogel particles are tuned to have at least one optical property substantially similar to a circulating tumor cell or a fetal cell, present in maternal blood. The individual particles are embedded with known quantities of a biomolecule of interest. The particles are used to generate a standard curve for a biomolecule detection assay for the particular cell type.


As provided above, in one aspect of the invention, a hydrogel comprising an embedded substance is provided. In one embodiment, the embedded substance is a bead or plurality of beads. In one embodiment, a hydrogel particle is embedded with a single bead. In another embodiment, individual hydrogels the average number of embedded beads in a plurality of hydrogel particles is one.


In the case where a bead or plurality of beads are embedded into a hydrogel particle, in one embodiment, the optical properties of the bead or plurality of beads are used in combination with the FSC and SSC properties of the hydrogel particle for quality control of a flow cytometry assay. For example, the embedded bead in one embodiment is used as a control to calibrate the flow cytometer system, including the laser source, optics, and stream flow. In another embodiment, the embedded bead is used as a means for quantitating the amount of fluorescence in a sample, e.g., a particular cell. In this regard, embedded beads of various intensities can be used to generate a standard curve of fluorescence to determine whether a cell expresses a certain marker and at what level of expression.


In one embodiment, a bead with the diameter of about 1 μm to about 3 μm, about 2 μm to about 4 μm or about 3 μm to about 7 μm is embedded in a hydrogel provided herein. For example, in one embodiment, the bead has a diameter of about 3 μm to about 3.5 μm. In a further embodiment, the bead is a fluorescent bead. In another embodiment, the bead has a diameter of about 1 μm to about 2.5 μm or about 1.5 μm to about 3 μm. In a further embodiment, the bead is a fluorescent bead and can be stained either internally or at its surface. In even a further embodiment, the fluorescent bead is stained internally. Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is thought that internal staining insulates the fluorophores from environmental interactions that could cause variable fluorescence output.


As provided above, in one embodiment, the embedded bead is a fluorescence bead and in a further embodiment, the fluorescent bead is stained internally. It is within the skill in the art to select the appropriate fluorophore for use in conjunction with an embedded bead. In one embodiment, the bead is derivatized with one or more of the following fluorescent dyes: 6-carboxy-4′, 5′-dichloro-2′, 7-dimethoxyfluorescein succinimidylester; 5-(and-6)-carboxyeosin; 5-carboxyfluorescein; 6 carboxyfluorescein; 5-(and-6)-carboxyfluorescein: S-carboxyfluorescein-bis-(5-carboxymethoxy-2-nitrobenzyl)ether,-alanine-carboxamide, or succinimidyl ester; 5-carboxy fluorescein succinimidyl ester; 6-carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester; 5-(and-6)-carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester; 5-(4,6-dichlorotriazinyl) amino fluorescein; 2′,7′-difluoro fluorescein; eosin-5-isothiocyanate: erythrosin5-isothiocyanate; 6-(fluorescein-5-carboxamido) hexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester; 6-(fluorescein-5-(and-6)-carboxamido) hexanoic acid or succinimidylester: fluorescein-S-EX succinimidyl ester; fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate; fluorescein-6-isothiocyanate; OregonGreen® 488 carboxylic acid, or succinimidyl ester; Oregon Green® 488 isothiocyanate; Oregon Green® 488-X succinimidyl ester; Oregon Green® 500 carboxylic acid; Oregon Green® 500 carboxylic acid, succinimidylester or triethylammonium salt; Oregon Green® 514 carboxylic acid; Oregon Green® 514 carboxylic acid or succinimidyl ester; RhodamineGreen™ carboxylic acid, succinimidyl ester or hydrochloride; Rhodamine Green™ carboxylic acid, trifluoroacetamide or succinimidylester; Rhodamine Green™-X succinimidyl ester or hydrochloride; RhodolGreen™ carboxylic acid, N,O-bis-(trifluoroacetyl) or succinimidylester; bis-(4-carboxypiperidinyl) sulfonethodamine or di(succinimidylester); 5-(and-6)carboxynaphtho fluorescein,5-(and-6)carboxynaphthofluorescein succinimidyl ester;5-carboxyrhodamine 6G hydrochloride; 6-carboxyrhodamine6Ghydrochloride, 5-carboxyrhodamine 6G succinimidyl ester;6-carboxyrhodamine 6G succinimidyl ester; 5-(and-6)-carboxyrhodamine6G succinimidyl ester;5-carboxy-2′,4′,5′,7′-tetrabromosulfonefluorescein succinimidyl esteror bis-(diisopropylethylammonium) salt; 5-carboxytetramethylrhodamine; 6-carboxytetramethylrhodamine: 5-(and-6)-carboxytetramethylrhodamine; 5-carboxytetramethylrhodamine succinimidyl ester; 6-carboxytetramethylrhodaminesuccinimidyl ester;5-(and-6)-carboxytetramethylrhodamine succinimidyl ester;6-carboxy-X-rhodamine; 5-carboxy-X-rhodamine succinimidyl ester;6-carboxy-Xrhodamine succinimidyl ester; 5-(and-6)-carboxy-Xrhodanincsuccinimidyl ester; 5-carboxy-X-rhodamine triethylammonium salt; Lissamine™ rhodamine B sulfonyl chloride; malachite green: isothiocyanate; NANOGOLD® mono(sulfosuccinimidyl ester); QSY® 21carboxylic acid or succinimidyl ester; QSY® 7 carboxylic acid or succinimidyl ester; Rhodamine Red™-X succinimidyl ester;6-(tetramethylrhodamine-5-(and-6)-carboxamido) hexanoic acid; succinimidyl ester; tetramethylrhodamine-5-isothiocyanate;tetramethylthodamine-6-isothiocyanate; tetramethylrhodamine-5-(and-6)-isothiocyanate: Texas Red® sulfonyl; Texas Red® sulfonyl chloride; Texas Red®-X STP ester or sodium salt; Texas Red®-X succinimidyl ester; Texas Red®-X succinimidyl ester; and X-rhodamine-5-(and-6) isothiocyanate, BODIPY® dyes commercially available from Invitrogen, including, but not limited to BODIPY® FL: BODIPY® TMR STP ester: BODIPY® TR-X STP ester: BODIPY® 630/650-X STPester; BODIPY® 650/665-X STP ester;6-dibromo-4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-dimethyl-4-bon-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3,5-dipropionic acid;4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-pentanoicacid; 4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimethyl-4-bora3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-pentanoicacid succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimefhyl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3propionicacid; 4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionicacid succinimidyl ester;4, 4difluoro-5, 7-dimefhyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3propionic acid: sulfosuccinimidyl ester or sodium salt; 6-((4,4-difluoro-5, 7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3propionyl)amino)hexanoicacid; 6-((4,4-difluoro-5, 7 dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionyl)amino)hexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester: N-(4, 4-difluoro 5, 7-dimethyl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionyl) cysteic acid, succinimidyl ester or triethylammonium salt; 6-4,4-difluoro-1,3-dimethyl-5-(4-methoxyphenyl)-4-bora3a, 4a4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-diphenyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-sindacene-3-propionicacid; 4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-diphenyl-4-bora3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionicacid succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5-phenyl-4-bora-3 a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid; succinimidyl ester;6-((4, 4-difluoro-5-phenyl-4 bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionyl)amino) hexanoicacid or succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5-(4-phenyl-1,3butadienyl)-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionicacid succinimidyl ester; 4, 4-difluoro-5-(2-pyrrolyl)-4-bora-3a,4-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid succinimidyl ester;6-(((4,4-difluoro-5-(2-pyrrolyl)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacen-3-yl)styryloxy)actyl)aininohexanoicacid or succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5-stytyl-4-bora-3a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid; 4, 4-difluoro-5-styryl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-sindacene-3-propionic acid; succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-1,3,5,7-tetramethyl-4-bora-3a,4adiaza-s-indacene-8-propionicacid; 4,4-difluoro-1,3,5,7-tetramethyl-4bora-3a,4a-diaza-sindacene-8-propionic acid succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5-(2-thienyl)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-sindacene-3-propionic acid succinimidyl ester;6-(((4-(4,4-difluoro-5-(2-thienyl)-4-bora-3 a, 4adiazas-indacene-3-yl)phenoxy)acetyl)amino)hexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester, and 6-(((4,4-difluoro-5-(2-thienyl)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-yl)styryloxy)acetyl) aminohexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester. Alexa fluor dyes commercially available from Invitrogen, including but not limited to Alexa Fluor® 350 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 430 carboxylic acid: Alexa Fluor® 488 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 532 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 546 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 555 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 568 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 594 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 633 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 64 7 carboxylic acid: Alexa Fluor® 660 carboxylic acid: and Alexa Fluor® 680 carboxylic acid, cyanine dyes commercially available from Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech, including, but not limited to Cy3 NHS ester; Cy 5 NHS ester; Cy5.5 NHSester; and Cy7 NHS ester.


Other Fluorophores amenable for use with the present invention are provided in Table 2 bel















TABLE 2











ACS


ID
NAME
Alternate Names
Excitation
Emission
Vendor/Source
CAS#





















ISAC148
6-carboxyfluorescein

492
518
PubChem
3301-79-9


ISAC1
6-JOE

520
550
LifeTechnologies
82855-40-1


ISAC2
7-AAD

545
647
LifeTechnologies
7240-37-1


ISAC3
Acridine Orange

503
525
LifeTechnologies
65-61-2


ISAC4
Alexa Fluor 350
AF350; 2H-1-
343
442
LifeTechnologies
244636-14-4




Benzopyran-6-








sulfonic acid, 7-








amino-3-[2-[(2,5-








dioxo-1-








pyrrolidinyl)oxy]-2-








oxoethyl]-4-methyl-2-








oxo-; 200554-19-4






ISAC6
Alexa Fluor 405
AF405;
401
425
LifeTechnologies
791637-08-6




C46H69N5O15S3






ISAC7
Alexa Fluor 430
AF430;
433
541
LifeTechnologies
467233-94-9




C32H42F3N3O9S






ISAC8
Alexa Fluor 488
AF488;
496
519
LifeTechnologies
247144-99-6




C25H15Li2N3O13S2






ISAC9
Alexa Fluor 500
AF500;
503
525
LifeTechnologies
798557-08-1




CAS#798557-08-1






ISAC10
Alexa Fluor 514
AF514;
517
542
LifeTechnologies
798557-07-0




C31H27N3O13S2






ISAC11
Alexa Fluor 532
AF532; 1H-
532
553
LifeTechnologies
222159-92-4




Pyrano[3,2-f:5,6-








f′]diindole-10,12-








disulfonic acid, 5-[4-








[[(2,5-dioxo-1-








pyrrolidinyl)oxy]carbonyl]phenyl]-








2,3,7,8-tetrahydro-








2,3,3,7,7,8-








hexamethyl-;








271795-14-3






ISAC13
Alexa Fluor 546
AF546;
556
573
LifeTechnologies
247145-23-9




C50H62Cl3N5O14S3






ISAC14
Alexa Fluor 555
AF555
555
565
LifeTechnologies
644990-77-2


ISAC15
Alexa Fluor 568
AF568
578
603
LifeTechnologies
247145-38-6


ISAC16
Alexa Fluor 594
AF594
590
617
LifeTechnologies
247145-86-4


ISAC17
Alexa Fluor 610
AF610;
612
628
LifeTechnologies
900528-62-3




C58H77Cl3N6O14S3






ISAC18
Alexa Fluor 633
AF633
632
647
LifeTechnologies
477780-06-6


ISAC19
Alexa Fluor 635
AF635
633
647
LifeTechnologies
945850-82-8


ISAC20
Alexa Fluor 647
AF647
650
665
LifeTechnologies
400051-23-2


ISAC21
Alexa Fluor 660
AF660
663
690
LifeTechnologies
422309-89-5


ISAC22
Alexa Fluor 680
AF680
679
702
LifeTechnologies
422309-67-9


ISAC23
Alexa Fluor 700
AF700
702
723
LifeTechnologies
697795-05-4


ISAC24
Alexa Fluor 750
AF750
749
775
LifeTechnologies
697795-06-5


ISAC25
Alexa Fluor 790
AF790
784
814
LifeTechnologies
950891-33-5


ISAC26
AMCA

346
448
SantaCruzBiotech
106562-32-7


ISAC27
AmCyan

457
489
BDBioscences
1216872-44-4


ISAC28
APC
Allophycocyanin
650
660
SigmaAldrich
No names








found


ISAC29
APC-Alexa
APC-AF680
655
704
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 680




found


ISAC30
APC-Alexa
APC-AF700
655
718
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 700




found


ISAC31
APC-Alexa
APC-AF750
650
775
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 750




found


ISAC32
APC-Cy5.5
Allophycocyanin-
650
695
LifeTechnologies
No names




Cy5.5



found


ISAC33
APC-Cy7
Allophycocyanin-Cy7
650
767
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC34
APC-eFluor 750
eFluor750APC
650
750
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC35
APC-eFluor 780
eFluor780APC
650
780
eBioscience
1472056-77-1


ISAC36
APC-H7
H7APC
650
765
BDBioscences
1366000-62-5


ISAC37
APC-Vio770
Vio770APC
652
775
Miltenyl Biotech
No names








found


ISAC38
Atto488

501
523
ATTO-TEC
923585-42-6


ISAC39
BIOTIN

0
0
PubChem
58-85-5


ISAC40
BODIPY FL

502
511
SantaCruzBiotech
165599-63-3


ISAC41
BODIPY R6G
4,4-difluoro-5-
527
547
LifeTechnologies
335193-70-9




phenyl-4-bora-3a,4a-








diaza-s-indacene-3-








propionic acid,








succinimidyl ester;








C22H18BF2N3O4






ISAC43
Brilliant
BV421
406
423
Biolegend
1428441-68-2



Violet 421







ISAC44
Brilliant
BV510
405
510
Biolegend
No names



Violet 510




found


ISAC45
Brilliant
BV570
407
571
Biolegend
1428441-76-2



Violet 570







ISAC46
Brilliant
BV605
407
603
Biolegend
1632128-60-9



Violet 605







ISAC47
Brilliant
BV612
0
0
Biolegend
1428441-91-1



Violet 612







ISAC48
Brilliant
BV650
407
647
Biolegend
No names



Violet 650




found


ISAC49
Brilliant
BV711
405
711
Biolegend
No names



Violet 711




found


ISAC50
Brilliant
BV785
405
786
Biolegend
1613592-44-1



Violet 785







ISAC53
Calcein
CAS#:1461-15-0
493
514
LifeTechnologies
1461-15-0


ISAC51
Calcein AM

496
517
PubChem
148504-34-1


ISAC52
Calcein Blue AM

360
445
PubChem
168482-84-6


ISAC54
Calcein Violet AM

400
452
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC55
Calcium Sensor

490
514
eBioscience
No names



Dye eFluor 514




found


ISAC56
Cascade Blue

401
420
PubChem
1325-87-7


ISAC57
Cascade Yellow

400
550
Synchem UG &
220930-95-0







Co. KG



ISAC58
Cell Proliferation

405
445
eBioscience
No names



Dye eFluor 450




found


ISAC59
Cell Proliferation

652
672
eBioscience
No names



Dye eFluor 670




found


ISAC60
CellTrace

392
455
LifeTechnologies
No names



Violet Cell




found



Proliferation







ISAC61
CellVue Claret

655
657
SigmaAldrich
1042142-46-0


ISAC62
CFSE

492
525
SantaCruzBiotech
150347-59-4


ISAC63
CPC
O-cresolphthalein
488
660
Chemical Book
2411-89-4




complexone






ISAC65
Cy2

492
507
GElifesciences
102185-03-5


ISAC66
Cy3

552
566
GElifesciences
146368-16-3


ISAC67
Cy3.5

581
598
GElifesciences
189767-45-1


ISAC68
Cy5

633
670
GElifesciences
144377-05-9


ISAC69
Cy5.5

677
695
GElifesciences
210892-23-2


ISAC70
Cy7

743
767
GElifesciences
169799-14-8


ISAC71
Cychrome

565
667
BDBioscences
245670-67-1


ISAC73
CyQUANT DNA

502
522
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC74
CyTRAK Orange
1,5-bis{[2-(di-
514
609
Abcam
1195771-25-5




methylamino)


(eBioscience)





ethyl]amino)-4,8-








dihydroxyanthracene-








9,10-dione






ISAC76
DAPI

358
462
PubChem
47165-04-8


ISAC77
DCFH

505
525
SigmaAldrich
106070-31-9


ISAC79
DiA
DiA: 4-Di-16-ASP (4-
455
586
LifeTechnologies
371114-38-4




(4-(Dihexadecylamino)styryl)-








N-Methylpyridinium








Iodide): C46H79IN2






ISAC81
DiD
DiD′ solid; DilC18(5)
647
669
LifeTechnologies
127274-91-3




solid (1,1′-








Dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-








Tetramethylindodicarbocyanine,








4-Chlorobenzenesulfonate








Salt);








C67H103ClN2O3S






ISAC84
Dil
Dil Stain (1,1′-
550
568
LifeTechnologies
41085-99-8




Dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-








Tetramethylindocarbocyanine








Perchlorate








(‘Dil’; DilC18(3)));








C59H97ClN2O4; 3H-








Indolium, 2-(3-(1,3-








dihydro-3,3-dimethyl-








1-octadecyl-2H-








indol-2-ylidene)-1-








propenyl)-3,3-








dimethyl-1-








octadecyl-,








perchlorate/






ISAC88
DiO
DiO′; DiOC18(3)
489
506
LifeTechnologies
34215-57-1




(3,3′








Dioctadecyloxacarbocyanine








Perchlorate);








C53H85ClN2O6;








Benzoxazolium, 3-








octadecyl-2-[3-(3-








octadecyl-2(3H)-








benzoxazolylidene)-








1-propenyl]-








perchlorate/






ISAC92
DiR
DiR′; DilC18(7) (1,1′-
750
781
LifeTechnologies
100068-60-8




Dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-








Tetramethylindotricarbocyanine








Iodide);








C63H101IN2






ISAC95
DRAQ5

645
683
CellSignalingTech
254098-36-7


ISAC96
DRAQ7

599
694
CellSignalingTech
1533453-55-2


ISAC97
DsRED

532
595
Clontech
469863-23-8


ISAC98
dsRed2-RFP

555
582
Clontech
No names








found


ISAC99
DY547
547 Dyomics
557
574
Dynomics
947138-67-2


ISAC100
DY634
634 Dyomics
635
658
Dynomics
1189010-49-8


ISAC101
DY647
647 Dyomics
650
665
Dynomics
890317-39-2


ISAC102
DyLight 350
DL350
353
432
PierceNet
1436849-83-0


ISAC103
DyLight 405
DL405
400
420
PierceNet
1051927-09-3


ISAC104
DyLight 488
DL488
493
518
PierceNet
1051927-12-8


ISAC105
DyLight 549
DL549
562
576
JacksonImmunoRes
1051927-13-9


ISAC106
DyLight 550
DL550
562
576
PierceNet
1340586-78-8


ISAC107
DyLight 594
DL594
593
618
PierceNet
1268612-00-5


ISAC108
DyLight 633
DL633
638
658
PierceNet
1051927-14-0


ISAC109
DyLight 649
DL649
654
670
JacksonImmunoRes
1051927-15-1


ISAC110
DyLight 650
DL650
652
672
PierceNet
1364214-13-0


ISAC111
DyLight 680
DL680
682
712
PierceNet
1051927-24-2


ISAC112
DyLight 800
DL800
777
794
PierceNet
1051927-23-1


ISAC113
EB
Ethidium Bromide
523
604
SigmaAldrich
1239-45-8


ISAC114
ECD

563
613
LifeTechnologies
88475-75-6


ISAC116
ECFP
enhanced cyan
435
477
MyBiosource
No names




fluorescent protein



found


ISAC118
EdU
EdU(5-ethynyl-
0
0
LifeTechnologies
61135-33-9




2\u2032-








deoxyuridine);








C11H12N2O5






ISAC120
EdU Alexa

496
516
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 488




found


ISAC121
EdU Alexa

650
665
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 647




found


ISAC122
EdU Pacific

405
455
LifeTechnologies
No names



Blue




found


ISAC123
eFluor 450

400
450
eBioscience
1592653-87-6


ISAC124
eFluor 450

400
450
eBioscience
No names



Fixable




found



Viability Dye







ISAC125
eFluor 490

350
490
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC126
eFluor 506

420
506
eBioscience
No names



Fixable




found



Viability Dye







ISAC127
eFluor 525

350
525
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC128
eFluor 565

350
565
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC129
eFluor 585

350
604
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC130
eFluor 605

350
605
eBioscience
1248429-27-7


ISAC131
eFluor 615

590
622
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC132
eFluor 625

350
625
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC133
eFluor 650

350
650
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC134
eFluor 660

633
658
eBioscience
1634649-16-3


ISAC135
eFluor 670

0
0
eBioscience
1437243-07-6


ISAC136
eFluor 700

350
700
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC137
eFluor 710

350
710
eBioscience
No names








found


ISAC138
eFluor 780

755
780
eBloscience
No names



Fixable




found



Viability Dye







ISAC139
EGFP
enhanced green
480
510
MyBiosource
No names




fluorescent protein



found


ISAC141
Emerald 300

289
530
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC142
Eosin

525
546
SigmaAldrich
17372-87-1


ISAC143
Ethidium

528
617
SigmaAldrich
61926-22-5



Homodimer-1







ISAC144
Ethidium

510
590
SigmaAldrich
58880-05-0



Monoazide








EMA







ISAC145
EYFP
enhanced yellow
515
528
MyBiosource
No names




fluorescent protein



found


ISAC147
FAM

492
518
PubChem
76823-03-5


ISAC149
FITC
Fluorescein
500
520
PubChem
27072-45-3


ISAC153
Fluo-3
C51H50Cl2N2O23;
506
526
LifeTechnologies
123632-39-3




Glycine, N-[4-[6-








[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2,7-dichloro-3-oxo-








3H-xanthen-9-yl]-2-








[2-[2-[bis[2-








[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2-oxyethyl]amino]-5-








methylphenoxy]ethoxy]phenyl]-








N-[2-[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2-oxyethyl]-.








(acetyloxy)methyl








ester/






ISAC155
Fluo-4
C51H50F2N2O23;
494
516
LifeTechnologies
273221-59-3




Glycine, N-[4-[6-








[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2,7-difluoro-3-oxo-








3H-xanthen-9-yl]-2-








[2-[2-[bis[2-








[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2-oxoethyl]amino]-








5-methylphenoxy]ethoxy]phenyl]-








N-[2-








[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2-oxoethyl]-,








(acetyloxy)methyl








ester/






ISAC152
FLMA
Fluorescein-5-
495
520
PierceNet
75350-46-8




maleimide






ISAC157
Fluoro-Emerald
Dextran,
495
523
LifeTechnologies
194369-11-4




Fluorescein, 10,000








MW, Anionic, Lysine








Fixable






ISAC159
Fura Red



LifeTechnologies
149732-62-7


ISAC162
Fura3
Fura-2 LeakRes
325
510
SigmaAldrich
172890-84-5




(AM)






ISAC164
FxCycle Far Red

640
658
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC165
FxCycle Violet
C16H17Cl2N5; 1H-
358
462
LifeTechnologies
28718-90-3




Indole-6-








carboximidamide, 2-








[4-








(aminoiminomethyl)phenyl]-,








dihydrochloride/






ISAC167
GFP
green fluorescent
488
515
MyBiosource
No names




protein



found


ISAC169
GFP Violet Excited

398
515
MyBiosource
No names








found


ISAC170
GFP-Vex1

398
515
MyBiosource
No names








found


ISAC171
HiLyte Fluor 488

501
527
Anaspec
1051927-29-7


ISAC172
HiLyte Fluor 555

550
566
Anaspec
1051927-30-0


ISAC173
HiLyte Fluor 647

649
674
Anaspec
925693-87-4


ISAC174
HiLyte Fluor 680

0
0
Anaspec
1051927-34-4


ISAC175
HiLyte Fluor 750

754
778
Anaspec
1051927-32-2


ISAC176
Hoechst 33258

345
455
SigmaAldrich
23491-45-4


ISAC177
Hoechst 33342
bisBenzimide H
343
455
SigmaAldrich
23491-52-3




33342








trihydrochloride






ISAC179
Hydroxycoumarin
C10H6O5; 7-
360
450
LifeTechnologies
43070-85-5




hydroxycoumarin-3-








carboxylic acid; 2H-








1-Benzopyran-3-








carboxylic acid, 7-








hydroxy-2-oxo-/; 4-








chloromethyl-7-








hydroxycoumarin






ISAC183
Indo-1
Indo-1 AM Calcium
347
480
LifeTechnologies
96314-96-4




Sensor Dye;








C47H51N3O22; 1H-








Indole-6-carboxylic








acid, 2-[4-[bis[2-








[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2-oxoethyl]amino]-








3-[2-[2-[bis[2-








[(acetyloxy)methoxy]-








2-oxoetyl]amino]-5-








methylphenoxy]ethoxy]phenyl]-,








(acetyloxy)methyl








ester/






ISAC187
JC-1
5,5′,6,6′-tetrachloro-
593
595
LifeTechnologies
3520-43-2




1,1′,3,3′-








tetraethylbenzimidazolylcarbocyanine








iodide;








C25H27Cl4IN4






ISAC189
Krome Orange

398
530
Beckman Coulter
1558035-65-6


ISAC190
Leadmium

490
520
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC191
LIVE/DEAD
Aqua
367
526
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable Aqua
LIVE/DEAD



found



Dead Cell Stain







ISAC193
LIVE/DEAD
Blue
343
442
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable Blue
LIVE/DEAD



found



Dead Cell Stain







ISAC195
LIVE/DEAD

650
670
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable Far




found



Red Dead Cell








Stain







ISAC196
LIVE/DEAD
Green
498
525
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable Green
LIVE/DEAD



found



Dead Cell








Stain







ISAC198
LIVE/DEAD

752
776
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable Near-




found



IR Dead Cell








Stain







ISAC199
LIVE/DEAD

594
612
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable




found



Red Dead Cell








Stain







ISAC200
LIVE/DEAD
Violet
403
455
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable
LIVE/DEAD



found



Violet Dead








Cell Stain







ISAC202
LIVE/DEAD
Yellow
401
551
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fixable
LIVE/DEAD



found



Yellow Dead








Cell Stain







ISAC204
Lucifer
C13H9Li2N5O9S2;
428
544
LifeTechnologies
82446-52-4



Yellow
1H-








Benz[de]isoquinoline-








5,8-disulfonic acid,








6-amino-2-








[(hydrazinocarbonyl)








amino]-2,3-dihydro-








1,3-dioxo-, dilithium








salt/






ISAC206
Magnesium Green
C33H17Cl2K5N2O13;
507
531
LifeTechnologies
170516-41-3




Glycine, N-[2-








(carboxymethoxy)-4-








[[(2′,7′-dichloro-3′,6′








dihydroxy-3-








oxospiro[isobenzofuran-








1(3H),9′-








[9H]xanthen]-5-








yl)carbonyl]amino]phenyl]-








N-(carboxymethyl)-,








pentapotassium salt/






ISAC208
Marina Blue
C16H11F2NO7; 2,5-
364
461
LifeTechnologies
215868-23-8




Pyrrolidinedione, 1-








[[(6,8-difluoro-7-








hydroxy-4-methyl-2-








oxo-2H-1-








benzopyrar-3-








yl)acetyl]oxy)-/;






ISAC210
mBanana

540
553
Clontech
1114839-40-5


ISAC211
mCherry

587
610
Clontech
1628764-31-7


ISAC212
mCitrine

516
529
Not
1357606-54-2







Commercialized



ISAC213
MethylCoumarin
AMCA-X, SE (6-((7-
360
448
LifeTechnologies
1333-47-7




Amino-4-








Methylcoumarin-3-








Acetyl)amino)Hexanoic








Acid,








Succinimidyl Ester);








C22H25N3O7






ISAC216
MitoTracker
C34H28Cl5N3O;
490
512
LifeTechnologies
1304563-13-0



Green
Benzoxazolium, 2-[3-








[5,6-dichloro-1,3-








bis[[4-








(chloromethyl)phenyl]methyl]-








1,3-dihydro-








2H-benzimidazol-2-








ylidene]-1-propenyl]-








3-methyl-, chloride/






ISAC218
MitoTracker
C24H24Cl2N2O
550
575
LifeTechnologies
No names



Orange




found


ISAC219
MitoTracker
C39H36Cl5N3
578
598
LifeTechnologies
No names



Red




found


ISAC220
mOrange

548
562
Clontech
1114839-60-9


ISAC221
mPlum

590
649
Clontech
1399820-93-9


ISAC222
mRaspberry

597
624
Clontech
1452799-41-5


ISAC223
mRFP1

584
607
Not
1452799-30-2







Commercialized



ISAC224
mStrawberry

574
596
Clontech
1114834-99-9


ISAC225
Na-Green
Sodium Green ™,
506
532
LifeTechnologies
195244-55-4




tetra(tetramethylammonium)








salt:








C84H100Cl4N8O19






ISAC228
Nile Red
C20H18N2O2; 5H-
559
637
LifeTechnologies
7385-67-3




Benzo[\u03B1]phenoxazin-








5-one, 9-








(diethylamino)-/






ISAC230
Oregon Green

491
519
LifeTechnologies
195136-58-4


ISAC232
Oregon Green 488-X,

500
525
LifeTechnologies
890416-18-9



succinimidyl ester







ISAC233
Oregon Green 514
Oregon Green ® 514
510
532
LifeTechnologies
198139-53-6




carboxylic acid,








succinimidyl ester;








C26H12F5NO9S






ISAC235
Pacific Blue
PacBlue; Pacific
405
455
LifeTechnologies
215868-31-8




Blue ™succinimidyl








ester; C14H7F2NO7






ISAC236
Pacific Blue

405
455
LifeTechnologies
215868-33-0



succinimidyl








ester







ISAC237
Pacific Orange
PacOrange
403
551
LifeTechnologies
1122414-42-9


ISAC240
PE-Alexa
RPE-AF610
563
628
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 610




found


ISAC241
PE-Alexa
RPE-AF647
567
669
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 647




found


ISAC242
PE-Alexa
RPE-AF680
570
702
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 680




found


ISAC243
PE-Alexa
RPE-AF700
563
720
LifeTechnologies
No names



Fluor 700




found


ISAC244
PE-Alexa
RPE-AF750
570
776
AbD Serotec
No names



Fluor 750




found


ISAC245
PE-CF594
PE-Dazzle 594
564
612
BDBioscences
1613592-67-8


ISAC72
PE-Cy5

565
667
BDBioscences
1448849-77-1


ISAC248
PE-Cy5.5

563
695
AbD Serotec
No names








found


ISAC249
PE-Cy7

563
760
AbD Serotec
1429496-42-3


ISAC250
PE-DY590

563
599
LSBio
No names








found


ISAC251
PE-DY647

563
672
LSBio
No names








found


ISAC252
PerCP

490
675
AbD Serotec
422551-33-5


ISAC253
PerCP-Cy5.5

488
695
AbD Serotec
1474026-81-7


ISAC254
PerCP-eFluor 710

488
710
eBioscience
1353683-31-4


ISAC115
PE-Texas Red

563
613
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC256
PE-Vio770

565
775
Miltenyl Biotech
No names








found


ISAC257
pHrodo
pHrodo ™ Red,
560
586
LifeTechnologies
No names




succinimidyl ester



found




(pHrodo ™ Red, SE);








pHrodo ™ Green








STP Ester






ISAC260
pHrodo Green

560
586
LifeTechnologies
No names



STP Ester




found


ISAC258
pHrodo Red,

560
586
LifeTechnologies
No names



succinimidyl




found



ester







ISAC261
Phycocyanin

617
646
SigmaAldrich
11016-15-2


ISAC262
PicoGreen
Quant-iT ™
502
522
LifeTechnologies
177571-06-1




PicoGreen ® dsDNA








Reagent






ISAC264
PKH2
PKH2 Green
490
504
SigmaAldrich
145687-07-6




Fluorescent Cell








Linker






ISAC266
PKH26
PKH26 Red
551
567
SigmaAldrich
154214-55-8




Fluorescent Cell








Linker






ISAC268
PKH67
PKH67 Green
490
504
SigmaAldrich
257277-27-3




Fluorescent Cell








Linker






ISAC270
POPO-1
C41H54I4N6O2:
433
457
LifeTechnologies
169454-15-3




Benzoxazolium, 2,2′-








[1,3-








propanediylbis[(dimethyliminio)-








3,1-propanediyl-








1(4H)-pyridinyl-4-








ylidenemethylidyne]]








bis[3-methyl]-,








tetraiodide/






ISAC272
PO-PRO-1
C20H27I2N3O;
435
457
LifeTechnologies
157199-56-9




Benzoxazolium, 3-








methyl-2-[[1-[3-








(trimethylammonio)propyl]-








4(1H)-








pyridinylidene]methyl]-;








diiodide/;






ISAC274
Propidium Iodide
C27H34I2N4
350
617
LifeTechnologies
25535-16-4




Phenanthridinium,








3,8-diamino-5-[3-








(diethylmethylammonio)propyl]-








6-phenyl-, diiodide






ISAC276
PURE

0
0
Not
No names







Commercialized
found


ISAC277
Pyronin Y

547
560
SigmaAldrich
92-32-0


ISAC278
Qdot 525

350
525
LifeTechnologies
885332-45-6


ISAC279
Qdot 545

350
545
LifeTechnologies
948906-89-6


ISAC280
Qdot 565

350
565
LifeTechnologies
859509-02-7


ISAC281
Qdot 585

350
585
LifeTechnologies
885332-46-7


ISAC282
Qdot 605

350
605
LifeTechnologies
849813-89-4


ISAC283
Odot 625

350
625
LifeTechnologies
1144512-19-5


ISAC284
Qdot 655

350
655
LifeTechnologies
674287-64-0


ISAC285
Qdot 705

350
705
LifeTechnologies
885332-47-8


ISAC286
Qdot 800

350
800
LifeTechnologies
885332-50-3


ISAC287
RD1
R-Phycoerythrin
563
578
LifeTechnologies
1376573-14-6


ISAC295
Rhodamine

550
570
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC290
Rho 110
Rhodamine 110
497
520
LifeTechnologies
13558-31-1


ISAC293
Rho 123
Rhodamine 123
507
529
LifeTechnologies
62669-70-9


ISAC296
Rhodamine Green
Rhodamine
505
527
LifeTechnologies
189200-71-3




Green ™carboxylic








acid, succinimidyl








ester, hydrochloride;








C25H18ClN3O7
















ISAC297
Rhodamine Green carboxylic acid,
505
527
LifeTechnologies
254732-34-8



succinimidyl ester, hydrochloride

















ISAC298
Rhodamine Red

573
591
LifeTechnologies
99752-92-8


ISAC299
Rhodamine Red-X
Rhodamine Red ™-
570
576
LifeTechnologies
178623-12-6




X, succinimidyl ester;








C37H44N4O10S2






ISAC300
Rhodamine Red-X,

570
576
LifeTechnologies
178623-13-7



succinimidyl ester







ISAC301
RiboFlavin

266
531
SigmaAldrich
83-88-5


ISAC239
R-Phycoerythrin
PE
563
578
LifeTechnologies
11016-17-4












ISAC303
SNARF-1 carboxylic acid, acetate,
549
586
LifeTechnologies
No names



succinimidyl ester



found













ISAC302
SNARF-1 pH 6
SNARF ®-1
549
586
LifeTechnologies
No names




carboxylic acid,



found




acetate, succinimidyl








ester; C33H24N2O9






ISAC304
SNARF-1 pH 9

576
640
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC305
Spectral Red

506
665
MyBiosource
No names








found


ISAC306
SureLight P1

545
667
Abcam
No names







(Columbia
found







Biosciences)



ISAC307
SureLight P3

614
662
Abcam
1365659-06-8


ISAC308
SureLight PBXL-3

614
662
Abcam
No names








found


ISAC309
SYBR Green

498
522
SigmaAldrich
217087-73-5


ISAC310
SYTO 11

506
526
LifeTechnologies
173080-67-6


ISAC311
SYTO 13

488
506
LifeTechnologies
173080-69-8


ISAC312
SYTO 16

488
520
LifeTechnologies
173080-72-3


ISAC313
SYTO 17

618
637
LifeTechnologies
189233-66-7


ISAC314
SYTO 45

450
486
LifeTechnologies
335078-86-9


ISAC315
SYTO 59

622
643
LifeTechnologies
235422-34-1


ISAC316
SYTO 60

650
681
LifeTechnologies
335079-14-6


ISAC317
SYTO 61

618
651
LifeTechnologies
335079-15-7


ISAC318
SYTO 62

650
681
LifeTechnologies
286951-08-4


ISAC319
SYTO 82

540
560
LifeTechnologies
335079-10-2


ISAC320
SYTO 9

482
500
LifeTechnologies
208540-89-0


ISAC321
SYTOX AADvanced

546
646
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC322
SYTOX Blue

431
480
LifeTechnologies
396077-00-2


ISAC323
SYTOX Green

504
523
LifeTechnologies
194100-76-0


ISAC324
SYTOX Orange

547
570
LifeTechnologies
324767-53-5


ISAC325
SYTOX Red

640
658
LifeTechnologies
915152-67-9


ISAC326
tdTomato

554
581
Clontech
1114838-94-6


ISAC334
Tetramethylrhodamine
TMRho
553
581
LifeTechnologies
70281-37-7


ISAC329
Texas Red
Texas Red ®-X,
589
615
LifeTechnologies
82354-19-6




succinimidyl ester;








C41H44N4O10S2






ISAC330
Texas Red-X,

589
615
LifeTechnologies
216972-99-5



succinimidyl ester







ISAC331
Thiazole Orange

500
530
SigmaAldrich
107091-89-4


ISAC332
ThiolTracker Violet

406
526
LifeTechnologies
No names








found


ISAC335
TO-PRO-1
TO-PRO ®-1 iodide
509
533
LifeTechnologies
157199-59-2




(515/531);








C24H29I2N3S;








Quinolinium, 4-[(3-








methyl-2(3H)-








benzothiazolylidene)








methyl]-1-[3-








(trimethylammonio)propyl]-,








diiodide/;






ISAC338
TO-PRO-3
TO-PRO ®-3 iodide
642
661
LifeTechnologies
157199-63-8




(642/661);








C26H31I2N3S;








Quinolinium, 4-[3-(3-








methyl-2(3H)-








benzothiazolylidene)-








1-propenyl]-1-[3-








(trimethylammonio)propyl]-,








diiodide/






ISAC341
TOTO-1
TOTO ®-1 iodide
509
533
LifeTechnologies
143413-84-7




(514/533);








C49H58I4N6S2;








Quinolinium, 1-1′-








[1,3-








propanediylbis[(dimethyliminio)-








3,1-propanediyl]]bis[4-








[(3-methyl-2(3H)-








benzothiazolylidene)








methyl]]-, tetraiodide/






ISAC344
TOTO-3
TOTO ®-3 iodide
642
661
LifeTechnologies
166196-17-4




(642/660);








C53H62I4N6S2






ISAC346
TriColor

563
670
LifeTechnologies
478184-50-8


ISAC347
TRITC
Tetramethylrhodamine;
547
572
LifeTechnologies
745735-42-6




tetramethylrhodamine-








5-(and-6)-








isothiocyanate;








C25H21N3O3S;








Xanthylium, 9-(2-








carboxyisothiocyanatophenyl)-








3,6-bis(dimethylamino)-,








inner salt/






ISAC351
TruRed

490
695
Not
396076-95-2







Commercialized



ISAC352
V19

397
572
Not
No names







Commercialized
found


ISAC353
V450

405
448
BDBioscences
1257844-82-8


ISAC354
V500

415
500
BDBioscences
1333160-12-5


ISAC355
VioBlue

400
452
Millenyl Biotech
1431147-59-9


ISAC356
VioGreen

388
520
Miltenyl Biotech
No names








found


ISAC357
Vybrant

505
535
LifeTechnologies
1431152-50-9



DyeCycle








Green







ISAC358
Vybrant

518
563
LifeTechnologies
1055990-89-0



DyeCycle








Orange







ISAC359
Vybrant

637
686
LifeTechnologies
1345202-72-3



DyeCycle








Ruby







ISAC360
Vybrant

370
436
LifeTechnologies
1015439-88-9



DyeCycle








Violet







ISAC361
YFP
Yellow Fluorescent
505
530
Clontech
No names




Protein



found


ISAC363
YO-PRO-1
YO-PRO ®-1 iodide
491
506
LifeTechnologies
152068-09-2




(491/509);








C24H29I2N3O






ISAC365
YO-PRO-3
YO-PRO ®-3 iodide
613
629
LifeTechnologies
157199-62-7




(612/631);








C26H31I2N3O;








Quinolinium, 4-[3-(3-








methyl-2(3H)-








benzoxazolylidene)-








1-propenyl]-1-[3-








(trimethylammonio)propyl]-,








diiodide/






ISAC368
YOYO-1
YOYO ®-1 iodide
491
509
LifeTechnologies
143413-85-8




(491/509);








C49H58I4N6O2:






ISAC370
YOYO-3
YOYO ®-3 iodide
613
629
LifeTechnologies
156312-20-8




(612/631);








C53H62I4N6O2;








Quinolinium, 1,1′








[1,3-








propanediylbis[(dimethyliminio)-








3,1-








propanediyl]]bis[4-[3-








(3-methyl-2(3H)-








benzoxazolylidene)-








1-propenyl]]-,








tetraiodide/;






ISAC373
ZsGreen

494
517
Clontech
1216871-88-3









Commercially available beads including, but not limited to, those sold by Bangs Laboratories. Inc, Spherotech Inc., Thermo Scientific, Inc. and equivalent suppliers) can be used in combination with the hydrogel particles described herein. Depending on the assay, it is within the ordinary skill in the art to select a bead with the proper bead diameter, fluorescent emission and/or excitation spectrum and/or fluorescent intensity. For example, a quality control bead used in conjunction with a blue, red or UV laser can be embedded into one or more hydrogel particles provided herein. For example, an Alignflow™ flow cytometry alignment bead for blue lasers (catalog no. A-16500 (2.5 μm), A-16503 (6.0 μm)), red lasers (catalog no. A-16501 (2.5 μm), A-16504 (6.0 μm)) or UV lasers (catalog no. A-16502 (2.5 μm), A-16505 (6.0 μm)) can be embedded in on or more of the hydrogel particles provided herein.


In one embodiment, a fluorescent bead that can be excited at any wavelength from 365 nm-650 nm is embedded in a hydrogel particle. In one embodiment, the bead is a “rainbow particle” that contains a mixture of fluorophores, for example 4 fluorophores, 5 fluorophores, 6 fluorophores, seven fluorophores or eight fluorophores. In this regard, the user selects which wavelength to excite the particle, depending on the fluorophore being interrogated. Rainbow particles are commercially available, for example, from BD Biosciences (catalog nos. 556298 (mid range FL1 fluorescence), 556286 (6 color, 3.0-3.4 μm), 556288 (6 color, 6.0-6.4 μm), 559123 (8 color)) and Spherotech in various diameters (e.g., catalog nos. RCP20-5 (4 color), RCP-30-5 (6 peaks), RCP-30-5A (8 peaks)


A cell sorting set-up bead can be embedded in one or more of the hydrogel particles provided herein. In one embodiment, a cell sorting set-up beads approximates the size, emission wavelength, and intensity of a biological sample, and can be used to calibrate a flow cytometer's cell sorting system, including laser source, optics, and stream flow. In one embodiment, a cell sorting set-up beads is embedded in one or more hydrogel particles and is amenable for use with a UV, blue, green/yellow or red laser. Where a green laser is used, in one embodiment, the embedded bead is excited at 570 nm with emission of 575 nm, but may also be exited at 488 nm. Commercially available cell sorting set-up beads am available, for example, from Life Technologies (catalog nos. C-16506 (UV laser), C-16508 (blue laser), C-16509 (green-yellow laser), C-16307 (red laser)).


A compensation control bead can also be embedded in one or more of the hydrogel particles provided herein. Accurate compensation is an important parameter for effective multicolor analysis inflow cytometry. However, cellular-based compensation controls are not completely effective as many antigens are not highly expressed, and dimly stained cells can lead to inaccurate compensation settings.


A compensation control bead, in one embodiment, includes a fluorescent antibody conjugate capture capacity (positive compensation bead) or is inert (negative compensation bead). The compensation bead is mixed with a fluorophore-conjugated human, mouse, rat, hamster, or rabbit antibody; the two components provide a distinct high-signal positive control with an appropriate negative population that can then be used to set compensation properly regardless of the intensity of the cells in the actual experiment. Once the antibody is mixed with the bead, it is embedded in one or more of the hydrogel particles provided herein. Commercially available compensation beads are available, for example, from Life Technologies (catalog nos. A-10344, A-10389, A10497, A10513) and Spherotech (catalog nos. CMIg-P-08-2K, CMIg-P-30-2K, CMIg-P-50-3K, CMIg-P-70-3K).


In one embodiment, a hydrogel particle with an embedded/encapsulated bead is used as a reference for a cellular away, for example, a phagocytosis assay cytoxicity assay, motility assay, viability assay, etc. Phagocytosis is the process by which a cell engulfs a solid particle to form an internal vesicle known as a phagosome. In this regard, a hydrogel particle can be tuned to have one or more optical properties substantially similar to a phagocyte, before and after the phagocyte engulfs a particle. Accordingly, in one embodiment, the hydrogel particles provided herein are used as control particles for a phagocytosis assay. In a further embodiment, (i) one or more of the optical properties of a hydrogel particle is substantially similar to a phagocyte prior to particle uptake and (ii) one or more of the optical properties of a second hydrogel particle is substantially similar to a phagocyte after to particle uptake. In this regard, a control is generated for measuring particle uptake by a phagocyte.


In one embodiment, the phagocyte is a professional phagocyte. In another embodiment, the phagocyte is a non-professional phagocyte (i.e., a cell that consumes dying cells and foreign organisms). In a further embodiment, the non-professional phagocyte is an epithelial cell, endothelial cell, fibroblast or mesenchymal cell. Hydrogel particles in one embodiment, are tuned to have one or more optical properties substantially similar to a professional phagocyte set forth in Table 3 below (prior to and/or after particle uptake).










TABLE 3





Location
Phagocyte type







Blood
Neutrophil, monocyte


Bone marrow
Macrophage, monocyte, sinusoidal cell, lining cell


Bone tissue
Osteoclast


Gut and intestinal
Macrophage


Peyer's patches


Connective tissue
Histiocyte, macrophage, monocyte, dendritic cell


Liver
Kupffer cell, monocyte


Lung
Self-replicating macrophage, monocyte, mast cell,



dendritic cell


Lymphoid tissue
Free and fixed macrophages and monocytes, dendritic



cell


Nervous tissue
Microglial cell (CD4+)


Spleen
Free and fixed macrophages, monocytes, sinusoidal



cell


Thymus
Free and fixed macrophages, monocytes


Skin
Resident Langerhans cells, dendritic cells,



conventional macrophage, mast cell









In one embodiment, a plurality of hydrogel particles of the invention, embedded with a substance such as nucleic acid or a bead is used as control reagents for a genomic cytometry assay. In this regard, a specific number of copies of a particular chromosome, RNA sequence and/or DNA sequence can be mimicked by the embedded substance. The hydrogel particle can then be used as a control for a sample being probed for genetic information, such as the number of copies of a chromosome, the number of copies of an RNA sequence and/or the number of copies of an RNA sequence.


The three primary modes of deconvolution for flow cytometry are the two passive optical properties of a particle (forward scattering, FSC, corresponding to the refractive index, or RI; and side scattering, SSC) and biomarkers present on the surface of a given cell type. Therefore, compositions that allow hydrogel particles of the disclosure to mimic specific cell types with respect to these three modes are useful for providing synthetic, robust calibrants for flow cytometry.


In one embodiment, the refractive index (RI) of a disclosed hydrogel particle is greater than about 1.10, greater than about 1.15, greater than about 1.20, greater than about 1.25, greater than about 1.30, greater than about 1.35, greater than about 1.40, greater than about 1.45, greater than about 1.50, greater than about 1.55, greater than about 1.60, greater than about 1.65, greater than about 1.70, greater than about 1.75, greater than about 1.80, greater than about 1.85, greater than about 1.90, greater than about 1.95, greater than about 2.00, greater than about 2.10, greater than about 2.20, greater than about 2.30, greater than about 2.40, greater than about 2.50, greater than about 2.60, greater than about 2.70, greater than about 2.80, or greater than about 2.90.


In another embodiment, the refractive index (RI) of a disclosed hydrogel particle is about 1.10 to about 3.0, or about 1.15 to about 3.0, or about 1.20 to about 3.0, or about 1.25 to about 3.0, or about 1.30 to about 3.0, or about 1.35 to about 3.0, or about 1.4 to about 3.0, or about 1.45 to about 3.0, or about 1.50 to about 3.0, or about 1.6 to about 3.0, or about 1.7 to about 3.0, or about 1.8 to about 3.0, or about 1.9 to about 3.0, or about 2.0 to about 3.0.


In some embodiments, the refractive index (RI) of a disclosed hydrogel particle is less than about 1.10, less than about 1.15, less than about 1.20, less than about 1.25, less than about 1.30, less than about 1.35, less than about 1.40, less than about 1.45, less than about 1.50, less than about 1.55, less than about 1.60, less than about 1.65, less than about 1.70, less than about 1.75, less than about 1.80, less than about 1.85, less than about 1.90, less than about 1.95, less than about 2.00, less than about 2.10, less than about 2.20, less than about 2.30, less than about 2.40, less than about 2.50, less than about 2.60, less than about 2.70, less than about 2.80, or less than about 2.90.


The SSC of a disclosed hydrogel particle is most meaningfully measured in comparison to that of target cell. In some embodiments, a disclosed hydrogel particle has an SSC within 30%, within 25%, within 20%, within 15%, within 10%, within 5%, or within 1% that of a target cell, as measured by a cytometric device.


The SSC of a hydrogel particle in one embodiment, is modulated by incorporating a high-refractive index molecule (or plurality thereof) in the hydrogel. In one embodiment, a high-refractive index molecule is provided in a hydrogel particle, and in a further embodiment, the high-refractive index molecule is colloidal silica, alkyl acrylate, alkyl methacrylate or a combination thereof. Thus in some embodiments, a hydrogel particle of the disclosure comprises alkyl acrylate and/or alkyl methacrylate. Concentration of monomer in one embodiment is adjusted to further adjust the refractive index of the hydrogel particle.


Alkyl acrylates or Alkyl methacrylates can contain 1 to 18, 1 to 8, or 2 to 8, carbon atoms in the alkyl group, such as methyl, ethyl, n-propyl, isopropyl, n-butyl, isobutyl or tertbutyl, 2-ethylhexyl, heptyl or octyl groups. The alkyl group may be branched or linear.


High-refractive index molecules can also include vinylarenes such as styrene and methylstyrene, optionally substituted on the aromatic ring with an alkyl group, such as methyl, ethyl or tert-butyl, or with a halogen, such as chlorostyrene.


In some embodiments, FSC is modulated by adjusting the percentage of monomer present in the composition thereby altering the water content present during hydrogel formation. In one embodiment, where a monomer and co-monomer are employed, the ratio of monomer and co-monomer is adjusted to change the hydrogel particle's forward scatter properties. This is shown in both FIG. 11 and FIG. 12.


The FSC of a disclosed hydrogel particle is most meaningfully measured in comparison to that of target cell. In some embodiments, a disclosed hydrogel particle has an FSC within 30%, within 25%, within 20%, within 15%, within 10%, within 5%, or within 1% that of a target cell, as measured by a cytometric device.


FSC is related to particle volume, and thus can be modulated by altering particle diameter, as described herein. Generally, it has been observed that large objects refract more light than smaller objects leading to high forward scatter signals (and vice versa). Accordingly, particle diameter in one embodiment is altered to modulate FSC properties of a hydrogel particle. For example, hydrogel particle diameter is increased in one embodiment is altered by harnessing larger microfluidic channels during particle formation.


SSC can be engineered by encapsulating nanoparticles within hydrogels to mimic organelles in a target cell. In some embodiments, a hydrogel particle of the disclosure comprises one or more types of nanoparticles selected from the group consisting of: polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) nanoparticles, polystyrene (PS) nanoparticles, and silica nanoparticles. See also FIGS. 11 and 12 which show that addition of various concentrations of nanoparticles allow for the adjustment of side scatter of a particle. Without wishing to be bound by theory, the ability to selectively tune both forward and side scatter of a hydrogel, as described herein, allows for a robust platform to mimic a vast array of cell types.


Although the invention is mainly described with respect to the modification of optical properties, the invention is not limited thereto. For example, hydrogel particles can be fabricated and adjusted to tune the capacitance of the particles, e.g., to calibrate coulter counters. In one embodiment, a hydrogel particle's capacitance is adjusted by altering the amount of hydrogel monomer in the composition. For example, polyanaline, polyacetylene; polyphenylene vinylene; polypyrrole (X═NH) and polythiophene (X═S) co-monomers; and polyaniline (X═NH/N) and polyphenylene sulfide (X═S) co-monomer concentrations can all be adjusted to alter capacitance. In one embodiment, the concentration of one or more of these monomers is increased to increase the capacitance of the hydrogel particle.


In some embodiments, a hydrogel particle of the disclosure has material modulus properties (e.g., elasticity) more closely resembling that of a target cell as compared to a polystyrene bead of the same diameter.


After the hydrogel particle is formed, one or more of the particle's surfaces can be functionalized, for example, to mimic one or more optical properties of a target cell or a labeled target cell. The functionalized hydrogel particle can also include an embedded bead or substance such as a biomolecule, as described above. In one embodiment, one or more hydrogel particles are functionalized with one or more fluorescent dyes, one or more cell surface markers (or epitope binding regions thereof), or a combination thereof. In one embodiment, the hydrogel particle is formed by polymerizing at least one bifunctional monomer and after formation, the hydrogel particle includes one or more functional groups that can be used for further attachment of a cell surface marker, an epitope binding region of a cell surface marker, a fluorescent dye, or combination thereof. The free functional group, in one embodiment, is an amine group, a carboxyl group, a hydroxyl group or a combination thereof. Depending on the functionalization desired, it is to be understood that multiple bifunctional monomers can be used, for example, to functionalize the particle using different chemistries and with different molecules.


A hydrogel particle can be functionalized with any fluorescent dye known in the art, including fluorescent dyes listed in The MolecularProbes® Handbook-A Guide to Fluorescent Probes and Labeling Technologies, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes. Functionalization can be mediated by a compound comprising a free amine group, e.g. allylamine, which can be incorporated into a bifunctional monomer used to form the hydrogel, as discussed above.


Non-limiting examples of known fluorescent dyes that can be used to functionalize the surface of a hydrogel particle described herein include: 6-carboxy-4′, 5′-dichloro-2′, 7′-dimethoxyfluorescein succinimidylester; 5-(and-6)-carboxyeosin; 5-carboxyfluorescein;6 carboxyfluorescein; 5-(and-6)-carboxyfluorescein; S-carboxyfluorescein-bis-(5-carboxymethoxy-2-nitrobenzyl)ether,-alanine-carboxamide, or succinimidyl ester: 5-carboxyfluoresceinsuccinimidyl ester; 6-carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester;5-(and-6)-carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester;5-(4,6-dichlorotriazinyl) amino fluorescein; 2′,7′-difluoro fluorescein; eosin-5-isothiocyanate; erythrosin5-isothiocyanate; 6-(fluorescein-5-carboxamido) hexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester; 6-(fluorescein-5-(and-6)-carboxamido)hexanoic acid or succinimidylester; fluorescein-S-EX succinimidyl ester; fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate; fluorescein-6-isothiocyanate; OregonGreen® 488 carboxylic acid, or succinimidyl ester; Oregon Green® 488 isothiocyanate: Oregon Green® 488-X succinimidyl ester; Oregon Green® 500 carboxylic acid; Oregon Green® 500 carboxylic acid, succinimidylester or triethylammonium salt; Oregon Green® 514 carboxylic acid; Oregon Green® 514 carboxylic acid or succinimidyl ester; RhodamineGreen™ carboxylic acid, succinimidyl ester or hydrochloride; Rhodamine Green™ carboxylic acid, trifluoroacetamide or succinimidylester; Rhodamine Green™-X succinimidyl ester or hydrochloride; RhodolGreen™ carboxylic acid, N,O-bis-(trifluoroacetyl) or succinimidylester; bis-(4-carboxypiperidinyl) sulfonerhodamine or di(succinimidylester); 5-(and-6)carboxynaphtho fluorescein,5-(and-6)carboxynaphthofluorescein succinimidyl ester; 5-carboxyrhodamine 6G hydrochloride; 6-carboxyrhodamine6Ghydrochloride, 5-carboxyrhodamine 6G succinimidyl ester;6-carboxyrhodamine 6G succinimidyl ester; 5-(and-6)-carboxyrhodamine6G succinimidyl ester;5-carboxy-2′,4′,5′,7′-tetrabromosulfonefluorescein succinimidyl esterot bis-(diisopropylethylammonium) salt; 5-carboxytetramethylrhodamine; 6-carboxytetramethylrhodamine; 5-(and-6)-carboxytetramethylrhodamine;5-carboxytetramethylrhodamine succinimidyl ester; 6-carboxytetramnethylrhodaminesuccinimidyl ester;5-(and-6)-carboxytetramethylrhodamine succinimidyl ester; 6-carboxy-X-rhodamine; 5-carboxy-X-rhodamine succinimidyl ester; 6-carboxy-Xrhodamine succinimidyl ester; 5-(and-6)-carboxy-Xrhodaminesuccinimidyl ester; 5-carboxy-X-rhodamine triethylammonium salt; Lissamine™ rhodamine B sulfonyl chloride; malachite green; isothiocyanate; NANOGOLD® mono(sulfosuccinimidyl ester); QSY® 21carboxylic acid or succinimidyl ester; QSY® 7 carboxylic acid or succinimidyl ester; Rhodamine Red™-X succinimidyl ester; 6-(tetramethylrhodamine-5-(and-6)-carboxamido) hexanoic acid; succinimidyl ester; tetramethylrhodamine-5-isothiocyanate;tetramethylrhodamine-6-isothiocyanate; tetramethylrhodamine-5-(and-6)-isothiocyanate; Texas Red® sulfonyl; Texas Red® sulfonyl chloride; Texas Red®-X STP ester or sodium salt; Texas Red®-X succinimidyl ester; Texas Red®-X succinimidyl ester; and X-rhodamine-5-(and-6) isothiocyanate.


Other examples of fluorescent dyes for use with the hydrogel particles described herein include, but are not limited to, BODIPY® dyes commercially available from Invitrogen, including, but not limited to BODIPY® FL; BODIPY® TMR STP ester; BODIPY® TR-X STP ester, BODIPY® 630/650-X STPester; BODIPY® 650/665-X STP ester;6-dibromo-4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-dimethyl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3,5-dipropionic acid;4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-pentanoicacid; 4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimethyl-4-bora3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-pentanoicacid succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimefhyl-4-bora-3 a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3propionicacid; 4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-dimethyl-4-bora-3 a, 4adiaza-s-indacene-3-propionicacid succinimidyl ester;4, 4difluoro-5, 7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3propionic acid; sulfosuccinimidyl ester or sodium salt; 6-((4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3propionyl)amino) hexanoic acid; 6-((4,4-difluoro-5, 7 dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionyl)amino) hexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester; N-(4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-dimethyl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionyl) cysteic acid, succinimidyl ester or triethylammonium salt;6-4,4-difluoro-1,3-dimethyl-5-(4-methoxyphenyl)-4-bora3a, 4a4,4-difluoro-5, 7-diphenyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-sindacene-3-propionicacid; 4, 4-difluoro-5, 7-diphenyl-4-bora3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid succinimidyl ester;4, 4-difluoro-5-phenyl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid; succinimidyl ester;6-((4, 4-difluoro-5-phenyl-4 bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionyl)amino) hexanoicacid or succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5-(4-phenyl-1,3butadienyl)-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionicacid succinimidyl ester; 4, 4-difluoro-5-(2-pyrrolyl)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid succinimidyl ester; 6-(((4,4-difluoro-5-(2-pyrrolyl)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-yl)styryloxy)acetyl)aminohexanoicacid or succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5-styryl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-propionic acid;4, 4-difluoro-5-styryl-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-sindacene-3-propionic acid; succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-1,3,5,7-tetramethyl-4-bora-3a,4adiaza-s-indacene-8-propionicacid; 4,4-difluoro-1,3,5,7-tetramethyl-4bora-3a,4a-diaza-sindacene-8-propionicacid succinimidyl ester;4,4-difluoro-5-(2-thienyl)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-sindacene-3-propionicacid succinimidyl ester;6-(((4-(4, 4-difluoro-5-(2-thienyl)-4-bora-3 a, 4a-diaza-sindacene-3-yl)phenoxy)acetyl)amino)hexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester; and 6-(((4,4-difluoro-5-(2-thienyl)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-yl) styryloxy)acetyl) aminohexanoic acid or succinimidyl ester.


Fluorescent dyes for derivatization of the surface of one or more hydrogel particles in one embodiment, include, but are not limited to, Alexa fluor dyes commercially available from Invitrogen, including but not limited to Alexa Fluor® 350 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 430 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 488 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 532 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 546 carboxylic acid: Alexa Fluor® 555 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 568 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 594 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 633 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 64 7 carboxylic acid; Alexa Fluor® 660 carboxylic acid; and Alexa Fluor® 680 carboxylic acid. In another embodiment, fluorescent dyes for use with the hydrogel particles and methods described herein include cyanine dyes commercially available from Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech, including, but not limited to Cy3 NHS ester; Cy 5 NHS ester; Cy5.5 NHSester: and Cy7 NHS ester.


It is within the ordinary skill in the art to select a suitable dye or dyes based on the desired spectral excitation and emission properties of the hydrogel particle.


Hydrogel particles, in one embodiment, are functionalized with one or more cell surface markers (see, e.g., Tables 4 and 7-8), or fragments thereof, for example, extracellular portions thereof in the case of transmembrane proteins, for example, by attaching the one or more cell surface markers, extracellular portions or ligand binding regions thereof to the particle via a free amine, free carboxyl and/or free hydroxyl group present on the surface of the hydrogel particle. Functionalization of a hydrogel particle with a dye or cell surface molecule can also occur through a linker, for example a streptavidin/biotin conjugate.


Depending on the target cell, individual hydrogel particles can be derivatized with one or more cell surface markers, or fragments thereof, for example, extracellular portions thereof in the case of transmembrane proteins to further mimic the structural properties of the target cell. Tables 4 and 7-8, provided below, sets forth a non-limiting list of cell surface markers that can be used to derivative hydrogel particles, depending on the target cell. Although the cell surface marker is provided, it is understood that a portion of the cell surface marker, for example, a receptor binding portion, a ligand binding portion, or an extracellular portion of the marker can be used to derivative the hydrogel particle (at the free functional group, as described above). See also FIGS. 11 and 12 which show that hydrogel surface modification with for example, a cell surface receptor, together with the selective tuning of FSC and/or SSC, allows for the fabrication of a hydrogel particle with the desired feature(s).











TABLE 4






Cell Surface Marker(s)
Cell Surface Marker(s)


Target Cell
(human)
(mouse)







B Cell
CD19, CD20
CD19, CD22 (B cell




activation marker),




CD45R/B220


T Cell
CD3, CD4, CD8
CD3, CD4, CD8


Activated T Cells
CD25, CD69
CD25, CD69


Dendritic Cell
CD1c, CD83, CD123,
CD11c, CD123, MHC II



CD141, CD209,



MHC II


Plasmacytoid
CD123, CD303,
CD11cint, CD317


Dendritic Cells*
CD304


Platelet (resting)
CD42b
CD41


Platelet (activated)
CD62P
CD62P


Natural Killer Cells
CD16, CD56
CD49b (clone DX5)


Hematopoietic Stem
CD34, CD90
CD48, CD117, CD150,


Cell

Sca-1


Macrophage
CD11b, CD68, CD163
F4/80, CD68


Monocyte
CD14, CD16, CD64
CD11b, CD115, Ly-6C


Plasma Cell
CD138
CD138


Red Blood Cell
CD235a
TER-119


Neutrophil
CD15, CD16
CD11b, Ly-6B.2, Ly6G,




Gr-1


Basophil
2D7 antigen, CD123,
CD200R3, FcεRlα



CD203c, FcεRlα


Eosinophil
CD11b, CD193,
CD11b, CD193, F4/80,



EMR1, Siglec-8
Siglec-F


Granulocyte
CD66b
CD66b, Gr-1/Ly6G, Ly6C


Endothelial cell
CD146
CD146 MECA-32, CD106,




CD31, CD62E (activated




endothelial cell)


Epithelial cell
CD326
CD326 (EPCAM1)


Natural Killer (NK)
CD56
CD335 (NKp46)


cell


Myeloid derived
CD11b, CD14, CD33
CD11b, GR1


suppressor cell
(Siglec-3)


(MDSC)









Cell types including but not limited to various cell lines such as CHO, HEK-293, BHK-21, NS0, MDCK, VERO, MRC-S, W1-38 and Sp2/0 Mouse Myeloma (hybridomas). Table 5 and Table 6 each provides other cell types for use with the hydrogel particles described herein.









TABLE 5







keratinocyte of epidermis


basal cell of epidermis


keratinocyte of fingernails and toenails


basal cell of nail bed


hair shaft cells


medullary hair shaft cells


cortical hair shaft cells


cuticular hair shaft cells


hair-root sheath cells


cuticular hair-root sheath cells


hair-root sheath cells of Huxley's layer


hair-root sheath cells of Henle's layer


external hair-root sheath cells


hair matrix cell (stem cell)


surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of tongue


surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of oral cavity


surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of esophagus


surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of anal canal


surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of distal urethra


surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of vagina


basal cell of these epithelia


cell of urinary epithelium


cells of salivary gland


Mucous cells of salivary gland


Serous cell of salivary gland


cell of von Ebner's gland in tongue


cell of mammary gland


cell of lacrimal gland


cell of ceruminous gland of ear


cell of eccrine sweat gland


cell of eccrine sweat gland


cell of apocrine sweat gland


cell of gland of Moll in eyelid


cell of sebaceous gland


cell of Bowman's gland in nose


cell of Brunner's gland in duodenum


cell of seminal vesicle


cell of prostate gland


cell of bulbourethral gland


cell of Bartholin's gland


cell of gland of Littre


cell of endometrium of uterus


isolated goblet cell of respiratory and digestive tracts


mucous cell of lining of stomach


zymogenic cell of gastric gland


oxyntic cell of gastric gland


acinar cell of pancreas


Paneth cell of small intestine


type II pneumocyte of lung


Clara cell of lung


cells of anterior pituitary


cell of intermediate pituitary


cells of posterior pitutiary


cells of gut and respiratory tract


cells of thyroid gland


cells of parathyroid gland


cells of adrenal gland


steroid hormones


cells of gonads


cells of juxtaglomerular apparatus of kidney


juxtaglomerular cell


macula


densa cell


peripolar cell


mesangial cell


brush border cell of intestine


striated duct cell of exocrine glands


gall bladder epithelial cell


brush border cell of proximal tubule of kidney


distal tubule cell of kidney


nonciliated cell of ductulus efferens


epididymal principal cell


epididymal basal cell


hepatocyte


white fat cell


brown fat cell


lipocyte of liver


type I pneumocyte


pancreatic duct cell


parietal cell of kidney glomerulus


podocyte of kidney glomerulus


cell of thin segment of loop of Henle


collecting duct cell (in kidney)


duct cell of seminal vesicle


duct cell of prostate gland


vascular endothelial cells of blood vessels and lymphatics


fenestrated vascular endothelial cells


continuous vascular endothelial cells


splenic vascular endothelial cells


synovial cell


serosal cell


squamous cell lining perilymphatic space of ear


cells lining endolymphatic space of ear


squamous cell


columnar cells of endolymphatic sac


“dark” cell


vestibular membrane cell


stria vascularis basal cell


stria vascularis marginal cell


cell of Claudius


cell of Boettcher


choroid plexus cell


squamous cell of pia-arachnoid


cells of ciliary epithelium of eye


corneal “endothelial” cell


Ciliated Cells of respiratory tract


Ciliated Cells of oviduct and of endometrium of uterus


Ciliated Cells of rete testis and ductulus efferens


Ciliated Cells of central nervous system


epithelial


ameloblast


nonepithelial


chondrocytes


osteoblast/osteocyte


osteoprogenitor cell


hyalocyte of vitreous body of eye


stellate cell of perilymphatic space of ear


skeletal muscle cells


heart muscle cells


smooth muscle cells (various)


myoepithelial cells


red blood cell


megakaryocyte


macrophages and related cells


neutrophil


eosinophil


basophil


mast cell


T lymphocyte


B lymphocyte


photoreceptors (rods, cones, and can be blue sensitive, green sensitive,


red sensitive)


inner hair cell of organ of Corti


outer hair cell of organ of Corti


type I hair cell of vestibular apparatus of ear


type II hair cell of vestibular apparatus of ear


type II taste bud cell


olfactory neuron


basal cell of olfactory epithelium


carotid body cell type I


carotid body cell type II


Merkel cell of epidermis


primary sensory neurons specialized for touch (various)


primary sensory neurons specialized for temperature - cold sensitive


primary sensory neurons specialized for temperature - heat sensitive


primary sensory neurons specialized for pain (various)


proprioceptive primary sensory neurons (various)


Autonomic Neurons


inner pillar cell


outer pillar cell


inner phalangeal cell


outer phalangeal cell


border cell


Hensen cell


supporting cell of vestibular apparatus


supporting cell of taste bud (type I taste bud cell)


supporting cell of olfactory epithelium


Schwann cell


satellite cell (encapsulating peripheral nerve cell bodies)


enteric glial cell


neurons


glial cells


anterior lens epithelial cell


lens fiber (crystallin-containing cell)


melanocyte


retinal pigmented epithelial cell


oogonium/oocyte


spermatocyte


spermatogonium (stem cell for spermatocyte)


ovarian follicle cell


Sertoli cell (in testis)


thymus epithelial cell


Salivary gland mucous cell


Salivary gland number 1


Von Ebner's gland cell in tongue


Mammary gland cell


Lacrimal gland cell


Ceruminous gland cell in ear


Eccrine sweat gland dark cell


Eccrine sweat gland clear cell


Apocrine sweat gland cell


Gland of Moll cell in eyelid


Sebaceous gland cell


Bowman's gland cell in nose


Brunner's gland cell in duodenum


Seminal vesicle cell


Prostate gland cell


Bulbourethral gland cell


Bartholin's gland cell


Gland of Littre cell


Uterus endometrium cell


goblet cell of respiratory and digestive tracts


Stomach lining mucous cell


Gastric gland zymogenic cell


Gastric gland oxyntic cell


Pancreatic acinar cell


Paneth cell of small intestine


pneumocyte of lung


Clara cell of lung


anterior pituitary cells


Somatotropes


Lactotropes


Thyrotropes


Gonadotropes


Corticotropes


melanocyte-stimulating hormone


Magnocellular neurosecretory cells secreting:


Gut and respiratory tract cells secreteing:


Thyroid gland cells


thyroid epithelial cell


parafollicular cell


Parathyroid gland cells


Parathyroid chief cell


Oxyphil cell


Adrenal gland cells


chromaffin cells


secreting steroid hormones (mineralcorticoids and gluco corticoids)


Leydig cell of testes secreting testosterone


Theca interna cell of ovarian follicle secreting estrogen


Corpus luteum cell of ruptured ovarian follicle secreting progesterone


Granulosa lutein cells


Theca lutein cells


Juxtaglomerular cell (renin secretion)


Macula densa cell of kidney


Peripolar cell of kidney


Mesangial cell of kidney


epidermal keratinocyte


Epidermal basal cell


Keratinocyte of fingernails and toenails


Nail bed basal cell (stem cell)


Medullary hair shaft cell


Cortical hair shaft cell


Cuticular hair shaft cell


Cuticular hair root sheath cell


Hair root sheath cell of Huxley's layer


Hair root sheath cell of Henle's layer


External hair root sheath cell


Hair matrix cell (stem cell)


epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of cornea,


epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of tongue


epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of oral cavity


epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of esophagus


epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of anal canal


epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of distalurethra


epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of vagina


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of cornea


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of tongue


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of oral cavity


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of esophagus


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of anal canal


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of distal urethra


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of vagina


Urinary epithelium cell


Auditory inner hair cell of organ of Corti


Auditory outer hair cell of organ of Corti


basal cell of olfactory epithelium


Cold-sensitive primary sensory neurons


Heat-sensitive primary sensory neurons


Merkel cell of epidermis (touch sensor)


Olfactory receptor neuron


Pain-sensitive primary sensory neurons (various types)


Photoreceptor cells of retina in eye:


Photoreceptor rod cells


Photoreceptor blue-sensitive cone cell of eye


Photoreceptor green-sensitive cone cell of eye


Photoreceptor red-sensitive cone cell of eye


Proprioceptive primary sensory neurons


Touch-sensitive primary sensory neurons


Type I carotid body cell


Type II carotid body cell


Type I hair cell of vestibular system of ear


Type II hair cell of vestibular system of ear


Type I taste bud cell


Cholinergic neural cell


Adrenergic neural cell


Peptidergic neural cell


Inner pillar cell of organ of Corti


Outer pillar cell of organ of Corti


Inner phalangeal cell of organ of Corti


Outer phalangeal cell of organ of Corti


Border cell of organ of Corti


Hensen cell of organ of Corti


Vestibular apparatus supporting cell


Taste bud supporting cell


Olfactory epithelium supporting cell


Schwann cell


Satellite glial cell


Enteric glial cell


Astrocyte


Neuron cells


Oligodendrocyte


Spindle neuron


Anterior lens epithelial cell


Crystallin-containing lens fiber cell


Hepatocyte


Adipocytes (white fat cell, brown fat cell, liver lipocyte)


Kidney parietal cell


Kidney glomerulus podocyte


Kidney proximal tubule brush border cell


Loop of Henle thin segment cell


Kidney distal tubule cell


Kidney collecting duct cell


Type I pneumocyte


Pancreatic duct cell


Nonstriated duct cell


principal cell


Intercalated cell


Duct cell


Intestinal brush border cell


Exocrine gland striated duct cell


Gall bladder epithelial cell


Ductulus efferens nonciliated cell


Epididymal principal cell


Epididymal basal cell


Ameloblast epithelial cell


Planum semilunatum epithelial cell of vestibular system of ear


Organ of Corti interdental epithelial cell


Loose connective tissue fibroblasts


Corneal fibroblasts (corneal keratocytes)


Tendon fibroblasts


Bone marrow reticular tissue fibroblasts


nonepithelial fibroblasts


Pericyte


Nucleus pulposus cell of intervertebral disc


Cementoblast/cementocyte


Odontoblast/odontocyte


Hyaline cartilage chondrocyte


Fibrocartilage chondrocyte


Elastic cartilage chondrocyte


Osteoblast/osteocyte


Osteoprogenitor cell


Hyalocyte of vitreous body of eye


Stellate cell of perilymphatic space of ear


Hepatic stellate cell (Ito cell)


Pancreatic stelle cell


skeletal muscle Cell


Red skeletal muscle cell (slow)


White skeletal muscle cell (fast)


Intermediate skeletal muscle cell


nuclear bag cell of muscle spindle


nuclear chain cell of muscle spindle


Satellite cell (stem cell)


Heart muscle cells


Ordinary heart muscle cell


Nodal heart muscle cell


Purkinje fiber cell


Smooth muscle cell


Myoepithelial cell of iris


Myoepithelial cell of exocrine glands


Erythrocyte


Megakaryocyte


Monocyte


Connective tissue macrophage


Epidermal Langerhans cell


Osteoclast (in bone)


Dendritic cell (in lymphoid tissues)


Microglial cell (in central nervous system)


Neutrophil granulocyte


Eosinophil granulocyte


Basophil granulocyte


Hybridoma cell


Mast cell


Helper T cell


Suppressor T cell


Cytotoxic T cell


Natural Killer T cell


B cell


Natural killer cell


Reticulocyte


Stem cells and committed progenitors for the blood and immune


system (various types)


Oogonium/Oocyte


Spermatid


Spermatocyte


Spermatogonium cell


Spermatozoon


Ovarian follicle cell


Sertoli cell (in testis)


Thymus epithelial cell


Interstitial kidney cells
















TABLE 6







Keratinizing Epithelial Cells


keratinocyte of epidermis (=differentiating epidermal cell)


basal cell of epidermis (stem cell)


keratinocyte of fingernails and toenails


basal cell of nail bed (stem cell)


hair shaft cells


medullary


cortical


cuticular


hair-root sheath cells


Cuticular root sheath cells


root sheath cells of Huxley's layer


root sheath cells of Henle's layer


external root sheath cells


hair matrix cell (stem cell)


Cells of Wet Stratified Barrier Epithelial


surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of cornea,


tongue, oral


cavity, esophagus, anal canal, distal urethra, vagina


basal cell of these epithelia (stem cell)


cell of urinary epithelium (lining bladder and urinary ducts)


Epithelial Cells Specialized for Exocrine Secretion


cells of salivary gland









mucous cell (secretion rich in polysaccharide)



serous cell (secretion rich in glycoprotein enzymes)







cell of von Ebner's gland in tongue (secretion to wash over taste


buds)


cell of mammary gland, secreting milk


cell of lacrimal gland, secreting tears


cell of ceruminous gland of ear, secreting wax


cell of eccrine sweat gland, secreting glycoproteins (dark cell)


cell of eccrine sweat gland, secreting small molecules (clear cell)


cell of apocrine sweat gland (odoriferous secretion, sex-hormone


sensitive)


cell of gland of Moll in eyelid (specialized sweat gland)


cell of sebaceous gland, secreting lipid-rich sebum


cell of Bowman's gland in nose (secretion to wash over olfactory


epithelium)


cell of Brunner's gland in duodenum, secreting alkaline solution of


mucus and enzymes


cell of seminal vesicle, secreting components of seminal fluid,


including fructose (as fuel for swimming sperm)


cell of prostate gland, secreting other components of seminal fluid


cell of bulbourethral gland, secreting mucus


cell of Bartholin's gland, secreting vaginal lubricant


cell of gland of Littre, secreting mucus


cell of endometrium of uterus, secreting mainly carbohydrates


isolated goblet cell of respiratory and digestive tracts, secreting


mucus


mucous cell of lining of stomach


zymogenic cell of gastric gland, secreting pepsinogen


oxyntic cell of gastric gland, secreting HCl


acinar cell of pancreas, secreting digestive enzymes and


bicarbonate


Paneth cell of small intestine, secreting lysozyme


type II pneumocyte of lung, secreting surfactant


Clara cell of lung (function unknown)


Cells Specialized for Secretion of Hormones


cells of anterior pituitary, secreting growth hormone, follicle-


stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, prolactin,


adrenocorticotropic hormone, and/or thyroid-stimulating hormone


cell of intermediate pituitary, secreting melanocyte-stimulating


hormone


cells of posterior pitutiary, secreting oxytocin and/or vasopressin


cells of gut and respiratory tract, secreting serotonin, endorphin,


somatostatin, gastrin, secretin, cholecystokinin, insulin, glucagon,


and/or bombesin


cells of thyroid gland, secreting









thyroid hormone



calcitonin







cells of parathyroid gland, secreting









parathyroid hormone



oxyphil cell (function unknown)







cells of adrenal gland, secreting









epinephrine



norepinephrine







steroid hormones









mineralocorticoids



glucocorticoids







cells of gonads, secreting









testosterone (Leydig cell of testis)



estrogen (theca interna cell of ovarian follicle)



progesterone (corpus luteum cell of ruptured ovarian follicle)







cells of juxtaglomerular apparatus of kidney


juxtaglomerular cell (secreting renin)











macula densa cell

(uncertain but probably related in



peripolar cell
{
function; possibly involved in secretion



mesangial cell

of erythropoietin)







Epithelial Absorptive Cells in Gut, Exocrine Glands, and Urogenital Tract


brush border cell of intestine (with microvilli)


striated duct cell of exocrine glands


gall bladder epithelial cell


brush border cell of proximal tubule of kidney


distal tubule cell of kidney


nonciliated cell of ductulus efferens


epididymal principal cell


epididymal basal cell


Cells Specialized for Metabolism and Storage


hepatocyte (liver cell)


fat cells









white fat



brown fat



lipocyte of liver







Epithelial Cells Serving Primarily a Barrier Function, Lining


the Lung, Gut, Exocrine Glands, and Urogenital Tract


type I pneumocyte (lining air space of lung)


pancreatic duct cell (centroacinar cell)


nonstriated duct cell of sweat gland, salivary gland, mammary


gland, etc.









(various)







parietal cell of kidney glomerulus


podocyte of kidney glomerulus


cell of thin segment of loop of Henle (in kidney)


collecting duct cell (in kidney)


duct cell of seminal vesicle, prostate gland, etc. (various)


Epithelial Cells Lining Closed Internal Body Cavities


vascular endothelial cells of blood vessels and lymphatics









fenestrated



continuous



splenic







synovial cell (lining joint cavities, secreting largely hyaluronic


acid)


serosal cell (lining peritoneal, pleural, and pericardial cavities)


squamous cell lining perilymphatic space of ear


cells lining endolymphatic space of ear









squamous cell



columnar cells of endolymphatic sac









with microvilli



without microvilli









“dark” cell



vestibular membrane cell



stria vascularis basal cell



stria vascularis marginal cell



cell of Claudius



cell of Boettcher







choroid plexus cell (secreting cerebrospinal fluid)


squamous cell of pia-arachnoid


cells of ciliary epithelium of eye









pigmented



nonpigmented







corneal “endothelial” cell


Ciliated Cells with Propulsive Function


Ciliated Cells of respiratory tract


Ciliated Cells of oviduct and of endometrium of uterus (in female)


Ciliated Cells of rete testis and ductulus efferens (in male)


Ciliated Cells of central nervous system (ependymal cell lining


brain cavities)


Cells Specialized for Secretion of Extracellular Matrix


epithelial









ameloblast (secreting enamel of tooth)



planum semilunatum cell of vestibular apparatus of ear









(secreting proteoglycan)









interdental cell of organ of Corti (secreting tectorial



“membrane” covering



hair cells of organ of Corti)







nonepithelial (connective tissue)









fibroblasts (various-of loose connective tissue, of cornea, of









tendon, of reticular tissue of bone marrow,



etc.)









pericyte of blood capillary



nucleus pulposus cell of intervertebral disc



cementoblast/cementocyte (secreting bonelike cementum of









root of tooth)









odontoblast/odontocyte (secreting dentin of tooth)



chondrocytes









of hyaline cartilage



of fibrocartilage



of elastic cartilage









osteoblast/osteocyte



osteoprogenitor cell (stem cell of osteoblasts)



hyalocyte of vitreous body of eye



stellate cell of perilymphatic space of ear







Contractile Cells


skeletal muscle cells









red (slow)



white (fast)



intermediate



muscle spindle-nuclear bag



muscle spindle-nuclear chain



satellite cell (stem cell)







heart muscle cells









ordinary



nodal



Purkinje fiber







smooth muscle cells (various)


myoepithelial cells









of iris



of exocrine glands







Cells of Blood and Immune System


red blood cell


megakaryocyte


macrophages and related cells









monocyte



connective-tissue macrophage (various)



Langerhans cell (in epidermis)



osteoclast (in bone)



dendritic cell (in lymphoid tissues)



microglial cell (in central nervous system)







neutrophil


eosinophil


basophil


mast cell


T lymphocyte









helper T cell



suppressor T cell



killer T cell







B lymphocyte









IgM



IgG



IgA



IgE







killer cell


stem cells and committed progenitors for the blood and









immune system (various)







Sensory Transducers


photoreceptors









rod



cones









blue sensitive



green sensitive



red sensitive







hearing









inner hair cell of organ of Corti



outer hair cell of organ of Corti







acceleration and gravity









type I hair cell of vestibular apparatus of ear



type II hair cell of vestibular apparatus of ear







taste









type II taste bud cell







smell









olfactory neuron







basal cell of olfactory epithelium (stem cell for olfactory neurons)


blood pH









carotid body cell









type I



type II







touch









Merkel cell of epidermis



primary sensory neurons specialized for touch (various)







temperature









primary sensory neurons specialized for temperature









cold sensitive



heat sensitive







pain









primary sensory neurons specialized for pain (various)







configurations and forces in musculoskeletal system









proprioceptive primary sensory neurons (various)







Autonomic Neurons


cholinergic (various)


adrenergic (various)


peptidergic (various)


Supporting Cells of Sense Organs and of Peripheral Neurons


supporting cells of organ of Corti


inner pillar cell









outer pillar cell



inner phalangeal cell



outer phalangeal cell



border cell



Hensen cell







supporting cell of vestibular apparatus


supporting cell of taste bud (type I taste bud cell)


supporting cell of olfactory epithelium


Schwann cell


satellite cell (encapsulating peripheral nerve cell bodies)


enteric glial cell


Neurons and Glial Cells of Central Nervous System


neurons (huge variety of types-still poorly classified)


glial cells









astrocyte (various)



oligodendrocyte







Lens Cells


anterior lens epithelial cell


lens fiber (crystallin-containing cell)


Pigment Cells


melanocyte


retinal pigmented epithelial cell


Germ Cells


oogonium/oocyte


spermatocyte


spermatogonium (stem cell for spermatocyte)


Nurse Cells


ovarian follicle cell


Sertoli cell (in testis)


thymus epithelial cell


Exocrine secretory epithelial cells


Salivary gland mucous cell (polysaccharide-rich secretion)


Salivary gland number 1 (glycoprotein enzyme-rich secretion)


Von Ebner's gland cell in tongue (washes taste buds)


Mammary gland cell (milk secretion)


Lacrimal gland cell (tear secretion)


Ceruminous gland cell in ear (earwax secretion)


Eccrine sweat gland dark cell (glycoprotein secretion)


Eccrine sweat gland clear cell (small molecule secretion)


Apocrine sweat gland cell (odoriferous secretion, sex-hormone


sensitive)


Gland of Moll cell in eyelid (specialized sweat gland)


Sebaceous gland cell (lipid-rich sebum secretion)


Bowman's gland cell in nose (washes olfactory epithelium)


Brunner's gland cell in duodenum (enzymes and alkaline


mucus)


Seminal vesicle cell (secretes seminal fluid components,


including fructose for swimming sperm)


Prostate gland cell (secretes seminal fluid components)


Bulbourethral gland cell (mucus secretion)


Bartholin's gland cell (vaginal lubricant secretion)


Gland of Littre cell (mucus secretion)


Uterus endometrium cell (carbohydrate secretion)


Isolated goblet cell of respiratory and digestive tracts (mucus


secretion)


Stomach lining mucous cell (mucus secretion)


Gastric gland zymogenic cell (pepsinogen secretion)


Gastric gland oxyntic cell (hydrochloric acid secretion)


Pancreatic acinar cell (bicarbonate and digestive enzyme


secretion)


Paneth cell of small intestine (lysozyme secretion)


Type II pneumocyte of lung (surfactant secretion)


Clara cell of lung


Hormone secreting cells


Anterior pituitary cells


Somatotropes


Lactotropes


Thyrotropes


Gonadotropes


Corticotropes


Intermediate pituitary cell, secreting melanocyte-stimulating


hormone


Magnocellular neurosecretory cells


secreting oxytocin


secreting vasopressin


Gut and respiratory tract cells


secreting serotonin


secreting endorphin


secreting somatostatin


secreting gastrin


secreting secretin


secreting cholecystokinin


secreting insulin


secreting glucagon


secreting bombesin


Thyroid gland cells


thyroid epithelial cell


parafollicular cell


Parathyroid gland cells


Parathyroid chief cell


Oxyphil cell


Adrenal gland cells


chromaffin cells


secreting steroid hormones (mineralcorticoids and gluco corticoids)


Leydig cell of testes secreting testosterone


Theca interna cell of ovarian follicle secreting estrogen


Corpus luteum cell of ruptured ovarian follicle secreting progesterone


Granulosa lutein cells


Theca lutein cells


Juxtaglomerular cell (renin secretion)


Macula densa cell of kidney


Peripolar cell of kidney


Mesangial cell of kidney


Derived primarily from ectoderm


Integumentary system


Keratinizing epithelial cells


Epidermal keratinocyte (differentiating epidermal cell)


Epidermal basal cell (stem cell)


Keratinocyte of fingernails and toenails


Nail bed basal cell (stem cell)


Medullary hair shaft cell


Cortical hair shaft cell


Cuticular hair shaft cell


Cuticular hair root sheath cell


Hair root sheath cell of Huxley's layer


Hair root sheath cell of Henle's layer


External hair root sheath cell


Hair matrix cell (stem cell)


Wet stratified barrier epithelial cells


Surface epithelial cell of stratified squamous epithelium of cornea,


tongue, oral cavity, esophagus, anal canal, distalurethra and vagina


basal cell (stem cell) of epithelia of cornea, tongue, oral cavity,


esophagus, anal canal, distal urethra and vagina


Urinary epithelium cell (lining urinary bladder and urinary ducts)


Nervous system


There are nerve cells, also known as neurons, present in our human


body. They are branched out. These cells make upnervous tissue.


A neuron consists of a cell body with a nucleus and cytoplasm,


from which long thin hair-like parts arise.


Sensory transducer cells


Auditory inner hair cell of organ of Corti


Auditory outer hair cell of organ of Corti


Basal cell of olfactory epithelium (stem cell for olfactory


neurons)


Cold-sensitive primary sensory neurons


Heat-sensitive primary sensory neurons


Merkel cell of epidermis (touch sensor)


Olfactory receptor neuron


Pain-sensitive primary sensory neurons (various types)


Photoreceptor cells of retina in eye:


Photoreceptor rod cells


Photoreceptor blue-sensitive cone cell of eye


Photoreceptor green-sensitive cone cell of eye


Photoreceptor red-sensitive cone cell of eye


Proprioceptive primary sensory neurons (various types)


Touch-sensitive primary sensory neurons (various types)


Type I carotid body cell (blood pH sensor)


Type II carotid body cell (blood pH sensor)


Type I hair cell of vestibular system of ear (acceleration and


gravity)


Type II hair cell of vestibular system of ear (acceleration and


gravity)


Type I taste bud cell


Autonomic neuron cells


Cholinergic neural cell


Adrenergic neural cell


Peptidergic neural cell


Sense organ and peripheral neuron supporting cells


Inner pillar cell of organ of Corti


Outer pillar cell of organ of Corti


Inner phalangeal cell of organ of Corti


Outer phalangeal cell of organ of Corti


Border cell of organ of Corti


Hensen cell of organ of Corti


Vestibular apparatus supporting cell


Taste bud supporting cell


Olfactory epithelium supporting cell


Schwann cell


Satellite glial cell (encapsulating peripheral nerve cell bodies)


Enteric glial cell


Central nervous system neurons and glial cells


Astrocyte (various types)


Neuron cells (large variety of types, still poorly classified)


Oligodendrocyte


Spindle neuron


Lens cells


Anterior lens epithelial cell


Crystallin-containing lens fiber cell


Derived primarily from mesoderm


Metabolism and storage cells


Hepatocyte (liver cell)


Adipocytes:


White fat cell


Brown fat cell


Liver lipocyte


Barrier function cells (lung, gut, exocrine glands and urogenital tract)


Kidney


Kidney parietal cell


Kidney glomerulus podocyte


Kidney proximal tubule brush border cell


Loop of Henle thin segment cell


Kidney distal tubule cell


Kidney collecting duct cell[disambiguation needed]


Type I pneumocyte (lining air space of lung cell)


Pancreatic duct cell (centroacinar cell)


Nonstriated duct cell (of sweat gland, salivary gland, mammary


gland, etc.)


principal cell


Intercalated cell


Duct cell (of seminal vesicle, prostate gland, etc.)


Intestinal brush border cell (with microvilli)


Exocrine gland striated duct cell


Gall bladder epithelial cell


Ductulus efferens nonciliated cell


Epididymal principal cell


Epididymal basal cell


Extracellular matrix cells


Ameloblast epithelial cell (tooth enamel secretion)


Planum semilunatum epithelial cell of vestibular system of ear


(proteoglycan secretion)


Organ of Corti interdental epithelial cell (secreting tectorial


membrane covering hair cells)


Loose connective tissue fibroblasts


Corneal fibroblasts (corneal keratocytes)


Tendon fibroblasts


Bone marrow reticular tissue fibroblasts


Other nonepithelial fibroblasts


Pericyte


Nucleus pulposus cell of intervertebral disc


Cementoblast/cementocyte (tooth root bonelike ewan cell


secretion)


Odontoblast/odontocyte (tooth dentin secretion)


Hyaline cartilage chondrocyte


Fibrocartilage chondrocyte


Elastic cartilage chondrocyte


Osteoblast/osteocyte


Osteoprogenitor cell (stem cell of osteoblasts)


Hyalocyte of vitreous body of eye


Stellate cell of perilymphatic space of ear


Hepatic stellate cell (Ito cell)


Pancreatic stelle cell


Contractile cells


skeletal muscle Cell


Red skeletal muscle cell (slow)


White skeletal muscle cell (fast)


Intermediate skeletal muscle cell


nuclear bag cell of muscle spindle


nuclear chain cell of muscle spindle


Satellite cell (stem cell)


Heart muscle cells


Ordinary heart muscle cell


Nodal heart muscle cell


Purkinje fiber cell


Smooth muscle cell (various types)


Myoepithelial cell of iris


Myoepithelial cell of exocrine glands


Blood and immune system cells


Erythrocyte (red blood cell)


Megakaryocyte (platelet pecursor)


Monocyte (white blood cell)


Connective tissue macrophage (various types)


Epidermal Langerhans cell


Osteoclast (in bone)


Dendritic cell (in lymphoid tissues)


Microglial cell (in central nervous system)


Neutrophil granulocyte


Eosinophil granulocyte


Basophil granulocyte


Hybridoma cell


Mast cell


Helper T cell


Suppressor T cell


Cytotoxic T cell


Natural Killer T cell


B cell


Natural killer cell


Reticulocyte


Stem cells and committed progenitors for the blood and immune


system (various types)


Germ cells


Oogonium/Oocyte


Spermatid


Spermatocyte


Spermatogonium cell (stem cell for spermatocyte)


Spermatozoon


Nurse cells


Ovarian follicle cell


Sertoli cell (in testis)


Thymus epithelial cell


Interstitial cells


Interstitial kidney cells
















TABLE 7







B Cell maturation markers for use with the


hydrogel particles described herein.








B-cell



type
Cell surface marker(s)





Pro-B
CD19, CD20, CD34, CD38, CD45R


Pre-B
CD19, CD20, CD38, CD45R


Immature B
CD19, CD20, CD40, CD45R, IgM


Tr-B
CD10, CD19, CD20, CD24, CD28


Naïve-B
CD19, CD20, CD23, CD40, CD150 (SLAM), IgD, IgM


B-1
CD19, CD20, CD27, IgM


Memory B
CD19, CD20, CD28, CD40, IgA, IgG


Plasma Cell
CD19, CD28, CD31, CD38, CD40, CD95 (FAS), CD184



(CXCR4)
















TABLE 8





Cell surface markers for use with the hydrogel particles described herein.
















14-3-3 Î ± Î2
ACD


14-3-3 Îμ
ACE2


14-3-3 ζ
Acetyl Coenzyme A Carboxylase


14-3-3 Î,
Acetyl Coenzyme A Carboxylase α


14-3-3 {hacek over (I)}f
Acetyl Coenzyme A Synthetase


15-Lipoxygenase 1
Acetylated Lysine


160 kD Neurofilament Medium
AChRα


200 kD Neurofilament Heavy
AChRÎ2


2H2
AChRÎ3


3G11 sialoganglioside antigen
Aconitase2


4E-BP1
ACOT12


4E-BP1 Phospho (Thr37/46)
ACSA2


5-Methylcytidine
ACSF2


5HT3A receptor
ACSM5


5T4
Act1


68 kDa Neurofilament Light
Activation molecule 8 (B cells)


7.1
Activin A Receptor Type IB


70 kD Neurofilament Light
Activin A Receptor Type IIB


A20
ACTN3


A2B5
ACY1


AAK1
ACY3


ABCA1
ADA


ABCA7
ADAM12


ABCB4
ADE2


ABCB5
Adenosine A1 Receptor


ABCC10
Adenosine A2aR


ABCC11
Adenovirus


ABCG1
Adenovirus Fiber monomer and trimer


ABI2
Adenovirus hexon protein


ABIN3
Adenylate Kinase 1


ABIN3Î2
Adenylosuccinate Lyase


ABL2
ADFP


Abraxas
ADH1B


ACAA1
ADH6


ACADM
ADH7


ACAT2
ADI1


ACBD3
Adiponectin



Adiponectin Receptor 2



Adipose Triglyceride Lipase


ADP Ribosylation Factor
Alexa Fluor 488


ADP-ribosyltransferase 2.2 gene
ALG2


Adrenodoxin
Alix


AF10
Allergin1


AFAP1
alpha 1 Antitrypsin


AFP
alpha 1 Catenin


AG2
alpha 1 Sodium Potassium ATPase


AGAP1
alpha 2 Catenin


AGPAT5
alpha 2 Macroglobulin


AGR2
alpha Actin 1


AHSG
alpha Actin 2


AICDA
alpha Actinin


AID
alpha Actinin 2


AIF
alpha Actinin 3


AIM-2
alpha Actinin 4


Aiolos
alpha Adaptin


AIPL1
alpha Adducin


AIRE
alpha B Crystallin


AK3
alpha Fodrin


AK3L1
alpha Internexin


AK5
alpha Synuclein


Akt
ALS1


Akt (pS473)
AMACR


Akt (pT308)
Aminopeptidase P


Akt1
AML1


Akt2
Amphiphysin


Akt3
AMPKα


Albumin
AMPKÎ ± 1


Alcohol Dehydrogenase
AMPKÎ ± 2


Aldehyde Reductase
AMPKÎ21


ALDH1A1
AMPKÎ31


ALDH1L1
AmyloidÎ2 42


ALDH2
ANAPC2


ALDH3A1
AND1


ALDH3A2
Androgen Receptor


ALDH5A1
Angiotensin I


ALDH6A1
Angiotensin II Receptor 2


ALDH7A1
Angiotensin III


ALDOB
ANKRD53


Aldolase B
Annexin IV


Alexa Fluor 405/Cascade Blue
Annexin V


ANP
Apolipoprotein F


Anti-Kudoa thrysites
Apolipoprotein H


Anti-T. brucei procyclin (GPEET)
Apolipoprotein J


Anti-T. brucei procyclin (phosphorylated GPEET)
Apolipoprotein L1


Antiglobulin (Coombs)
Apolipoprotein M


Antithrombin III
Apoptotic neutrophils


AP2 α
APP


AP2 Î ± Î2
Aquaporin 1


AP2 Î3
Aquaporin 5


AP2M1
ARF1


AP2S1
ARF5


APAF1
ARFGAP1


APBB3
ARFRP1


APC
Argonaute-1


APC-1
ARH


APC-10
ARHGAP25


APC-11
ARHGAP4


APC-2
ARL11


APC-3
ARL5B


APC-5
ARPC5


APC-7
Artemis


APC-8
Aryl hydrocarbon Receptor


APE1
ASB-1


APG12
ASCC1


APG3
ASCC2


APG5
ASGPR


APG7
Asialo-GM1


APMAP
ASK1


Apo-2.7
Asparagine synthetase


Apo-2.7 (7A6)
Ataxin 1


ApoE
ATF1


ApoE4
ATF2


APOER2
ATG4A


Apolipoprotein AI
ATG9A


Apolipoprotein AII
ATIC


Apolipoprotein AIV
Atlantic Salmon Ig


Apolipoprotein B
ATM


Apolipoprotein CIII
ATP citrate lyase


Apolipoprotein D
ATP1B3


Apolipoprotein E
ATP5A



ATP5H


ATP5J
Bax


ATP5O
BCAR1


ATP6V0D1
BCAR2


ATP6V1B1
BCKD complex E2 subunit


ATPB
Bcl-10


ATRIP
Bcl-2


Aurora A
Bcl-2 (pS70)


Aurora A Phospho (Thr288)
Bcl-2 like 12


Aurora B
Bcl-2 like 2


Aurora B Phospho (Thr232)
Bcl-22


AVEN
Bcl-2A1


Avian Influenza A Neuraminidase
Bcl-2α


Avidin
Bcl-3


Axin 2
Bcl-6


Axl
Bcl-xL


B and Activated T Cells
Bcl-XS/L


B Cell
BCR


B Cell Subset
BCSC1


B cells (pan reactive)
BDH2


B lymphocytes antibody [UCH-B1]
BDKRB2


b-Endorphin
BDNF


B-Raf Phospho (Thr598/Ser601)
Beclin1


B18R
Bestrophin 3


B7-H4
beta 2 Adrenoreceptor


BACE1
Beta 3 Adrenergic Receptor


BACE2
beta 3 Sodium Potassium ATPase


BACH1
beta Actin


baculovirus envelope gp64 protein
beta Arrestin 1


BAG1
beta Arrestin 2


BAG2
beta Catenin


BAG3
beta Catenin (npaa 27-37)


BAG4
beta Catenin (npaa 35-50)


BAIAP2
beta Catenin (pS45)


BAK
beta Dystroglycan


BAMBI
beta galactosidase


BAP31
beta galactosidase fusion proteins


BAP37
beta Synuclein


basal cell Cytokeratin
beta2 Microglobulin


Basophils
BHMT


Bassoon
Bid


BATF
Biglycan


Bilirubin Oxidase
BRaf


Bim
BRCA1


BimL
BRCC36


BIN1
BRD3


BIN3
BrdU


Biotin
BRF1


BiP
BRG1


BLBP
BRN3A


Blimp-1
Btk


BLK
Btk (pY551)/Itk (pY511)


BLNK
BTLN-2


BLNK (pY84)
BTN1A1


Blood Group A Antigen
Bu1


Blood Group AB Antigen
Bu1a


Blood Group B Antigen
Bu1a/Bu1b


Blood Group H ab Antigen
Bu1b


Blood Group H ab Antigen/n Antigen
BubR1


Blood Group H inhibitor
Bulb


Blood Group Lewis a
Butyrylcholinesterase


Blood Group M Antigen
C peptide


Blood Group N Antigen
C reactive protein


Blooms Syndrome Protein Blm
C/EBPÎ2


BM1
C1 Inhibitor


BMAL1
C15orf40


BMI1
C16orf72


Bmk
C1orf50


BMP15
C1Q


BMP4
C1QA


BMP7
C1QB


BMPR1A
C1QC


BMPR2
C1QG


BMX
C1r


bMyc
C1s


BNIP2
C20orf30


BNIP3
C20orf43


BNIP3L
C21orf56


BOB1
C21orf59


BORA
C2orf43


Borealin
C3


Borrelia burgdorferi
C3aR


BPI
C3b


C3c
Caldesmon


C3d
Calgranulin A


C4
Calgranulin B


C4 binding protein
Calmodulin


C4b
Calnexin - ER membrane marker


C4c
Calpain 1


C4d
Calpain 2


C4orf42
Calpain 9


C5
Calpain S1 (small subunit)


C5aR1
Calpastatin


C5L2
Calponin


C6
Calreticulin


C6orf64
Calretinin


C8A/B/G
Calsequestrin 2


C9
CaMKI


C9orf41
CaMKII


CA125
CaMKII Phospho (Thr286)


CA19.9
CaMKIIÎ′


CAB39
CamKIV


CACNA1S
CaMKIα


CACNA2
CAMLG


CACNG1
cAMP Protein Kinase Catalytic subunit


CAD
cAMP Protein Kinase Catalytic subunit α


Cadherin 1
Cannabinoid Receptor I


Cadherin 10
Cannabinoid Receptor II


Cadherin 11
CAP-G2


Cadherin 7
CAP18


Cadherin 8
CAP2


Cadherin 9
CAP3


Cadherin E
Carbonic Anhydrase I


Cadherin H
Carbonic Anhydrase IX


Cadherin K
Carboxylesterase 1


Cadherin P
Carboxypeptidase A1


Cadherin R
Carboxypeptidase A2


CAK C Terminus
CARD11


CAK N Terminus
CARD8


CAK Phospho (Ser164/Thr170)
CARD9


Calbindin
Cardiac Troponin T


Calcineurin A
CARKL


Calcitonin Receptor
CARM1


Calcium Sensing Receptor
Casein Kinase 1 α


Casein Kinase 1 Î32
CCNB1IP1


Casein Kinase 2 Î2
CCR10


Caspase 1
CCR11


Caspase 10
CCRD6


Caspase 11
CCRL2


Caspase 12
CD1


Caspase 2
CD1.1


Caspase 2L
CD10


Caspase 3
CD100


Caspase 4
CD101


Caspase 5
CD102


Caspase 6
CD103


Caspase 7
CD104


Caspase 8
CD105


Caspase 9
CD106


Catalase
CD107a


Catechol-O-methyltransferase
CD107b


Cathepsin D
CD108


Cathepsin K
CD109


Cathepsin L
CD11


Caveolin1
CD110


Caveolin1 (pY14)
CD111


Caveolin2
CD112


Cbl
CD113


CBP
CD114


CBWD1
CD115


CBX1
CD116


cCbl (pY700)
CD117


cCbl (pY774)
CD118


CCDC98
CD119


CCK4
CD11a


CCL11
CD11a, strain polymorphism


CCL17
CD11a/CD18


CCL18
CD11b


CCL19-Fc
CD11b/c


CCL20
CD11c


CCL21
CD11d


CCL25
CD120a


CCL3
CD120b


CCL5
CD121a


CCL6
CD121b


CD122
CD156c


CD123
CD157


CD124
CD158a


CD125
CD158a/h


CD126
CD158b


CD127
CD158b1/b2/j


CD129
CD158d


CD13
CD158e


CD130
CD158e/k


CD131
CD158e1


CD132
CD158e1/e2


CD133
CD158f


CD133/2
CD158g


CD134
CD158h


CD135
CD158i


CD136
CD158j


CD137
CD159a


CD137L
CD159c


CD138
CD15s


CD139
CD16


CD14
CD16/32


CD140a
CD16/56


CD140b
CD160


CD140b (pY1009)
CD161


CD140b (pY1021)
CD161a


CD140b (pY771)
CD162


CD140b (pY857)
CD162R


CD141
CD163


CD142
CD164


CD143
CD165


CD144
CD166


CD146
CD167a


CD147
CD168


CD148
CD169


CD15
CD16b


CD150
CD17


CD151
CD170


CD152
CD171


CD153
CD172


CD154
CD172a


CD155
CD172a/b


CD172b
CD202b


CD172g
CD203a


CD173
CD203c


CD177
CD204


CD178
CD205


CD178.1
CD206


CD179a
CD207


CD179b
CD208


CD18
CD209


CD180
CD209b


CD181
CD21


CD182
CD21/CD35


CD183
CD210


CD184
CD212


CD185
CD213a1


CD186
CD213a2


CD19
CD217


CD191
CD218a


CD192
CD22


CD193
CD22 (pY822)


CD194
CD22.2


CD195
CD220


CD195 (cytoplasmic)
CD220α


CD195 Phospho (Ser337)
CD221


CD195 Phospho (Ser349)
CD221 (pY1131)


CD196
CD222


CD197
CD223


CD198
CD224


CD199
CD226


CD1a
CD227


CD1b
CD229


CD1b/c
CD229.1


CD1c
CD23


CD1d
CD230


CD1d Î ± GalCer Complex
CD231


CD2
CD233


CD20
CD234


CD200
CD235a


CD200R
CD235ab


CD200R3
CD236


CD201
CD239


CD24
CD28


CD240CE
CD280


CD240DCE
CD281


CD243
CD282


CD244
CD283


CD244.1
CD284


CD244.2
CD284/MD2 Complex


CD245
CD286


CD246
CD289


CD247
CD29


CD247 (pY142)
CD290


CD249
CD294


CD25
CD298


CD252
CD299


CD253
CD2a


CD254
CD3


CD255
CD3/CD44


CD256
CD30


CD257
CD300


CD258
CD300a


CD26
CD300e


CD261
CD300f


CD262
CD301


CD263
CD303


CD264
CD303a


CD265
CD304


CD266
CD305


CD267
CD307d


CD268
CD309


CD269
CD31


CD27
CD310


CD270
CD312


CD271
CD314


CD272
CD314 (activating)


CD273
CD314 (blocking)


CD274
CD317


CD275
CD318


CD276
CD319


CD277
CD32


CD278
CD321


CD279
CD323


CD324
CD40bp


CD325
CD41


CD326
CD41/CD61


CD328
CD41a


CD329
CD41b


CD32B
CD42a


CD33
CD42b


CD334
CD42d


CD335
CD43


CD336
CD44


CD337
CD44 (v3)


CD338
CD44 (v4)


CD339
CD44 (v5)


CD34
CD44 (v6)


CD340
CD44 (v7)


CD344
CD44.2


CD349
CD44std


CD35
CD44v6


CD351
CD44var (v10)


CD354
CD44var (v3)


CD357
CD44var (v3-v10)


CD358
CD44var (v4)


CD36
CD44var (v5)


CD360
CD44var (v6)


CD361
CD44var (v7)


CD36L1
CD44var (v7-v8)


CD37
CD45


CD38
CD45.1


CD39
CD45.2


CD39L4
CD45R


CD3D
CD45RA


CD3G
CD45RB


CD3Î3
CD45RC


CD3Î′
CD45RO


CD3Îμ
CD46


CD3Îμ (CD3 Molecular Complex)
CD47


CD4
CD48


CD4 (domain 1)
CD49a


CD4 (domain 2)
CD49a/CD29


CD4 v4
CD49b


CD40
CD49b/CD29


CD49b/CD61
CD66a/c/d/e


CD49c
CD66a/c/e


CD49d
CD66a/e


CD49d/CD29
CD66b


CD49e
CD66c


CD49e/CD29
CD66c/e


CD49f
CD66e


CD49f/CD29
CD66f


CD4α
CD68


CD5
CD69


CD5.1
CD7


CD5.2
CD70


CD5.6
CD70b


CD50
CD71


CD51
CD72


CD51/61
CD72 a, b, c alloantigens


CD52
CD72 b, c alloantigens


CD53
CD72.1


CD54
CD73


CD55
CD74


CD56
CD75


CD57
CD77


CD58
CD78


CD59
CD79a


CD59a
CD79b


CD6
CD8


CD60b
CD80


CD61
CD81


CD62E
CD82


CD62L
CD83


CD62P
CD84


CD63
CD85


CD64
CD85a


CD64 a, b alloantigens
CD85d


CD64.1
CD85g


CD65
CD85h


CD65s (CD65 sialylated)
CD85j


CD66
CD85k


CD66a
CD86


CD66a/b/c/e
CD87


CD66a/c/d
CD88


CD89
CEACAM19


CD8α
CEACAM20


CD8Î ± .1
CEACAM7


CD8Î ± .2
CEBPα


CD8Î2
CEBPÎ2


CD9
CEND1


CD90.1
CENPA


CD90.2
CENPE


CD90.9
CENPF


CD91
CENPH


CD91α
Centrin 2


CD91Î2
CFAH


CD93
cFos


CD94
CFTR


CD95
CGB5


CD96
cGK1


CD97
CH2


CD98
CHCHD5


CD98hc
CHD3


CD99
CHD4


CD99R
Chemerin


Cdc-123
CHIPS, C-terminus


Cdc-2 (p34)
CHIPS, N-terminus


Cdc-25A Phosph (Ser17)
Chk1


Cdc-25C
Chk2


Cdc-37
Chondroitin Sulfate


Cdc-45L
CHOP


Cdc-6
Chromogranin C


CDc-7
ChT1


Cdk1
chTOG


Cdk2
cIAP1


Cdk4
cIAP2


Cdk5
CIAS1


Cdk6
CIDEA


Cdk7
CIP4


Cdk9
CISD1


CdkA1
CITED1


CdkN2A
CITED2


CdkN3
cJun


CDT1
cJun Phospho (Tyr91/Tyr93)


CDX2
CKIIα


CKMT2
Collagen VI


CLASP1
Collagen VII


Clathrin
COMMD1


Claudin-1
Complement Factor B


Claudin-10
Complex I Immunocapture


Claudin-15
Conjugated Choline Glutaric acid


Claudin-16
Connexin 26


Claudin-18 (C-term)
Connexin 30


Claudin-18 (Mid)
Connexin 30.2


Claudin-4
Connexin 30.3


Claudin-5
Connexin 32


Claudin-8
Connexin 36


CLAW-H
Connexin 37


CLEC12A
Connexin 37 (C-term)


CLEC1B
Connexin 37 (Mid)


CLEC4A
Connexin 39


CLEC4M
Connexin 39 (Mid)


CLEC9A
Connexin 40 (C-term)


CLIP
Connexin 40 (Mid)


CLOCK
Connexin 43



Clostridium botulinum Toxin B

Connexin 45


CLPP
Connexin 45 (C-term)


cMaf
Connexin 46


cMet
Connexin 47


CMKLR1
Connexin 57 (C-term)


CMRF44
Connexin 57 (Mid)


CMRF56
Contactin 2


cMyb
COPS3


cMyc
Coronavirus


CNDP2
Coronin 1A


CNTFRα
Coronin 1B


COASY
Cortactin


Coatomer Î′
Cortical Thymocytes


Cofilin
COX I


Colec12
COX I/III


Collagen I
COX II


Collagen I/III
COX IV


Collagen II
COX VA


Collagen III
COX VIA1


Collagen IV
Coxsackie Adenovirus Receptor


Collagen V
CPF


CPI17α
Cutaneous Lymphocyte Antigen


Cpn10
CUTL1


CPO
CX3CL1


CPS1
CX3CR1


CPT2
CXCL1


CRABP1
CXCL10


CRABP2
CXCL12α


CRALBP
CXCL12Î2


Creatine Kinase BB
CXCL13


Creatine Kinase MM
CXCL9


CREB
CXCR7


CREB Phospho (Ser133)
CXorf26


cRel
Cyanine


Cripto1
CYB5R2


CRISP3
CYB5R3


Crk p38
Cyclin A


CrkL
Cyclin A2


CrkL (pY207)
Cyclin B1


CROT
Cyclin B2


CRRY
Cyclin D1


CRTAM
Cyclin D2


CRTC3
Cyclin D3


CRY2
Cyclin E


Cryptochrome I
Cyclin E2


Cryptosporidium
Cyclin H


Cryptosporidium Parvum
Cyclins D1/D2/D3


CRYZL1
Cyclophilin 40


CSK
CYLD


CSK Binding Protein
CysLT1


CSPS
Cystatin C


cSrc
Cystatin S


CST2
Cytochrome B245 heavy chain


CTDSP1
Cytochrome B245 light chain


CTNNA3
Cytochrome c


CTNNBL1
Cytochrome P450 17A1


Cullin 1
Cytochrome P450 19A1


Cullin 2
Cytochrome P450 1A2


Cullin 3
Cytochrome P450 2A6


Cullin 4A
Cytochrome P450 2B6


Cullin 4A/B
Cytochrome P450 2C9


Cullin 4B
Cytochrome P450 2J2


Cytochrome P450 3A4
Daxx


Cytochrome P450 3A5
DAZL


Cytochrome P450 Reductase
DBC1


Cytokeratin
DCAMKL1


Cytokeratin (acidic)
DCC


Cytokeratin (basic)
DCIR2


Cytokeratin (Pan-reactive)
DCLRE1B


Cytokeratin 1
DCP1a


Cytokeratin 10
DcR3


Cytokeratin 10/13
DCTN2


Cytokeratin 13
DcTRAIL-R1


Cytokeratin 14
DcTRAIL-R2


Cytokeratin 14/15/16/19
DCXR


Cytokeratin 15
DDB1


Cytokeratin 16
DDDDK tag


Cytokeratin 17
DDX3


Cytokeratin 18
DDX4


Cytokeratin 19
DDX50


Cytokeratin 2
DECR1


Cytokeratin 20
Dectin1


Cytokeratin 4
Dectin2


Cytokeratin 4/5/6/8/10/13/18
DEF8


Cytokeratin 40
Defensin Î ± 1


Cytokeratin 5
DELETE


Cytokeratin 5/6/18
delta 1 Catenin


Cytokeratin 5/8
Delta like protein 1


Cytokeratin 6
Delta like protein 4


Cytokeratin 6a
Delta Opioid Receptor


Cytokeratin 7
DeltaC


Cytokeratin 7/17
DeltaD


Cytokeratin 8
Dendritic Cell Marker


Cytokeratin 8/18/19
Deoxycytidine kinase


D4-GDI
Desmin


DAB2
Desmoglein 2


DACH1
Desmoglein1


DAND5
Desmoplakin


DAP1
Destrin


DAP12
Dextran


DAPK1
DGKA


DAPK2
Dicer


DARPP32
DISC1 (C-term)


DISC1 (Mid)
DUSP23


Dishevelled 3
DUSP27


Disialoganglioside GD2
DUSP3


Disialoganglioside GD3
DUSP5


Dkk1
DUSP6


Dkk3
DUX4


DLC8
DYKDDDDK Epitope Tag


DLK1
Dynamin


Dlx5
Dynamin1


DM-GRASP
Dynamitin


DMT1
Dynein light chain 2


DNA-PKcs
Dysbindin


DNA-PKcs Phospho (Thr2609)
Dysferlin


DNAI1
Dystrobrevin α


DNAJA2
Dystrobrevin Î2


DNAJB2
Dystroglycan Phospho (Tyr893)


DNAJC3

E. Coli O/E



DNAPK
E2A-Pbx1


DNM1L
E2F1


Dnmt1
E47


Dnmt3b
E4BP4


DNP
Ea52-68 peptide bound to I-A


DOK2
Ea52-68 peptide bound to the I-A


DOK7
EAAT1


Dopamine Receptor D1
Early B Lineage


Dopamine Receptor D3
EBF1


Dopamine Receptor D5
EBI3


Dopamine Î2 Hydroxylase
EBP50


Doublecortin
ECGF1


DP1
ECH1


DPH2
ECRG4


DPP10
EDA


DPP3
EDA-A2R


DPP9
EDG1


Dppa4
EDG2


DPYD
EDG3


DR3
EDG6


DRAK1
EEA1


DRAK2
EEF1G


Drebrin
EEF2


DTYMK
EEF2K


EEN
Emi1


EFEMP1
EMR3


EFEMP2
EMSY


Eg5
Ena/Vasp-like


Eg5 Phospho (Thr927)
EndoG


EGF
EndoGlyx-1


EGF Receptor
Endomucin


EGF Receptor (pY1173)
Endothelial Cells


EGF Receptor (pY845)
Endothelial Lipase


EGF Receptor (pY992)
Endothelial Venule Marker


EGR1
Endothelium


EGR2
Engrailed1


EHD1
ENO1


eIF1
Enolase1


eIF2C2
eNOS


EIF2S1
eNOS (pS1177)


eIF2Î3
Entpd2


eIF3
Eomes


eIF3D
Eos


eIF3D (p66)
Epac1


eIF3F
Eph Receptor A1


eIF3G
Eph Receptor A2


eIF3H (p40)
Eph Receptor A4


eIF3I (p36)
Eph Receptor B4


eIF3J
Eph Receptor B6


eIF3K
Ephrin A2


eIF4B
Ephrin A3


eiF4E
EPHX2


eIF4E (pS209)
EPM2AIP1


eIF4E2
EPOR


eIF5A
EPS15R


eIF6
Epsin 1


Elastase
Epsin 2


Elk1
ER-HR3


Elk1 (pS383)
ER-MP54


ELK3
ER-TR7


Elongin B
ER81


Elongin C
ERAB


EMAP II
ERCC1


Embigin
ERG


EMG1
ERK1


ERK1/2 (pT185/pY187)
FAK


ERK1/2 (pT202/pY204)
FAK (pS910)


ERK1/ERK2
FAM119A


ERK2
FAM175A


ERK5
FAM84B


ERMAP
FAM91A1


ERp29
FANCC


ERp72
FANCD2


Erythroid Cells
Fanconi anemia D2 Phospho (Ser222)


Erzin/Radixin/Moesin
FAP


ERÎ ± Phospho (Ser167)
Fascin


ESAM
FBP1


Estrogen Inducible Protein pS2
FBXO21


Estrogen Receptor
FBXO31


Estrogen Receptor α
FBXO42


Estrogen Receptor Î2
FBXO43


Estrogen Related Receptor alpha
Fc Receptor Binding Inhibitor


ETAR
Fc receptor IgA + IgM


Ethenoadenosine
FcR


ETS1
FcRL6


EVI2A
FcRLA


EVI2B
FcÎμRI


EWSR1
FDC


EXD1
FDFT1


EXOSC3
FDPS


EXOSC7
FE65


EYA2
FeLV p27


EZH1/2
FEN1


Ezrin
FER


Ezrin (pY353)
Ferritin Heavy Chain


F-actin
Ferritin Light Chain


F10A1
Ferritin, mitochondrial


F4/80
FES


FAA4
Fetal Hemoglobin


FABP4
FGF acidic


Factor I
FGF basic


Factor IX
FGF21


Factor VIII.vWF (delete)
FGFR1


Factor XIIIa
FGFR2


FADD
FGR


FAHD2A
FH


FHL1
Fos


Fibrillarin
FOXA1


Fibrillin
FOXA2


Fibrinogen
FOXC2


Fibrinogen Î ± chain
FOXD3


Fibrinogen Î3 chain
FOXI1


Fibrinopeptide A
FOXJ1


Fibrinopeptide B
FOXM1


Fibroblast activation protein α
FOXO1


Fibroblast Surface Protein
FOXO3A


Fibroblasts/Epithelial cells
FOXP1


Fibronectin
FOXP3


Fibronectin Receptor
FPRL1


Fibulin5
FR4


Ficolin B
Fra2


Filaggrin
Fragilis


Filamin A
FRAT1


FITC
Frataxin


FITC/Oregon Green
Frequenin


FIV
Frizzled-1


FIV gp120
FSHα


FIV gp95
FSHÎ2


FIV p24
FUK


FIV p24 gag
FUS


FKBP12
FXYD3


FKBP4
FYB


FKBP6
Fyn


FKBPL
Fyn (pY528)/c-Src (pY530)


FLiC
Fyn-Related Kinase


Flightless1
FZR1


FLIP
G-CSF


Flt3L
G3BP


Fluorescent Protein
G6PD


FLV gp70
GAB1


FLYWCH2
GAB2


FMC7
GABA B Receptor 2


fMLP Receptor
GABARAP


FMRP
GAD65


FNTA
GAD67


FNTB
GADD34


Follicular Dendritic Cells
Galacto-cerebroside


Galactocerebroside
Gemin1


Galectin 1
Gephyrin


Galectin 10
GFAP


Galectin 3
GFP


Galectin 4
GILZ


Galectin 7
GIMAP4


Galectin 8
GIPR


Galectin 9
GIT2


gamma Synuclein
GITRL


Ganglioside GD2
GLAST


Ganglioside GD3
Gli1


Ganglioside GM1
Glial Fibrilary Acidic Protein


Gankyrin
Glicentin


GAP
GLIPR1L1


GAP43
Glucagon


GAPDH
Glucocorticoid Receptor


GARP
Glucocorticoid Receptor alpha


GAS2
Glucose 1 Dehydrogenase


GAS7
Glucose 6 Phosphate Isomerase


GAT2
GLUH1


GATA1
GLUT1


GATA2
GLUT2


GATA3
GLUT4


GATA4
GLUT5


GATM
Glutamate receptor 2


GBA3
Glutamate receptor 2/3


GBE1
Glutamate receptor 3


GBP1
Glutamate receptor 4


GBP2
Glutaminase


GBP5
Glutamine Synthetase


GC1qR
Glutaredoxin 2


GCDFP15
Glutathione NEM


GCDH
Glutathione NEW


GCK1
Glutathione Peroxidase 1


GCLM
Glutathione Peroxidase 4


GCN2
Glutathione Reductase


GCN5
Glutathione S Transferase Î, 2


GCTM2
Glutathione S Transferase ΰ1


GDAP1L1
Glutathione S Transferase μ


GDF15
Glutathione Synthetase


Gelsolin
Glycogen synthase 1


Glycoprotein IX
GRAP2


Glycoprotein VI
GRASP1


GM-CSF
GRASP65


GM130
GRB2


GM3.2
GRB7


GNB2
GRHPR


GNB2L1
GRIM19


GNLY
GRK1


GNMT
GRK2


GnRHR
GRK3


Golgi Protein (58K)
GRK5


Golgi Zone
GRK6


GOLM1
Growth hormone receptor


GOLPH2
GRP170


GOSR1
GRP94


gp340
GSC


gp49R
GSK3α


GPA33
GSK3α/Î2


GPCR5C
GSK3Î2


GPR-120
GSPT2


GPR-143
GST


GPR-151
GST Epitope Tag


GPR-18
GSTA4


GPR-30
GTF2D1


GPR-40
GTPase HRAS


GPR-48
GTPBP4


GPR-49
Guanylate kinase


GPR-50
H-2


GPR-56
H-2.m31


GPR-73A
H-2Db


GPR-73B
H-2Dd


GPR-77
H-2Kd


GPR-83
H2-M


GPR-86
H2-M3


GPR-C5C
H2A.X


GPR-C5D
H2A.X Phospho (Ser139)


Granulin
H2A1J


Granulysin
H60


Granzyme A
HA tag


Granzyme B
HADHA


Granzyme K
HADHA/HADHB


HADHB
HER3


HADHSC
HER4


HAND1
Hes1


HAO1
Hexokinase


Haptoglobin
Hexokinase1


HARS
Hexokinase2


HARS2
HFE1


HBF
HGF


hCGα
HGFA Inhibitor 1


hCGÎ2
HHEX


hCGÎ24
HHV8 GPCR


HCN4
HIBCH


HDAC1
HID1


HDAC10
HIF-1α


HDAC2
HIF-2α


HDAC3
HIF1AN


HDAC4
HINT1


HDAC6
HIP2


HDAC9
HIPK2


HDHD1A
Hippocalcin


HDHD2
Histamine H3 Receptor


HDJ2
Histocytes


HDLBP
Histone H1


HE4
Histone H1.0


HEC1
Histone H2A


HEF1
Histone H2B


Helios
Histone H2B type 1B


Hematopoiesis related Macrophage
Histone H3


Hematopoietic Lineage Cocktail
Histone H3 Phospho (Ser10)


Hematopoietic Progenitor Cell
Histone H3 Phospho (Ser28)


Hemoglobin
Histone H3.3


Hemoglobin F
Histone H4


Hemoglobin subunit α
HIV1 Core Antigen


Hepatitis B Virus
HIV1 p17


Hepatitis B Virus Core Antigen
HIV1 p24


Hepatitis B Virus E Antigen
HIV1 p55/p17


Hepatitis B Virus Surface Antigen (Ad/Ay)
HIV1 tat


Hepatitis C Virus
HL60


Hepatitis C Virus Core Antigen
HLA Class I


Hepatitis C Virus NS4
HLA-2Kb/2Db


Hepsin
HLA-2kb/2Dd


HLA-A
HLA-B48/B60


HLA-A/B/C
HLA-B5/B49/B56


HLA-A1/A11/A26
HLA-B7


HLA-A1/A36
HLA-B8


HLA-A10/A11
HLA-B8/B14


HLA-A10/A28/B75
HLA-BC


HLA-A10/B62/B71
HLA-Bw4/A9/A32


HLA-A11
HLA-Bw6


HLA-A2
HLA-Bw6/B77


HLA-A2/A25/A32
HLA-class I free chain


HLA-A2/A28
HLA-D


HLA-A2/A3/A29
HLA-DM


HLA-A2/A69
HLA-DO


HLA-A2/B17
HLA-DP


HLA-A2/B5
HLA-DQ


HLA-A2/B57
HLA-DQ/DR


HLA-A23/A24
HLA-DQ1/DQ3


HLA-A24/A11/A2403
HLA-DQ1/DR7


HLA-A25
HLA-DQ3


HLA-A25/A26
HLA-DQ6


HLA-A25/A26/A34
HLA-DQ7


HLA-A25/A32
HLA-DQA1


HLA-A26/A34/B71/B62
HLA-DQB1


HLA-A29
HLA-DQw1


HLA-A3
HLA-DR


HLA-A30/A31
HLA-DR/DP


HLA-A33/B8
HLA-DR/DP/DQ


HLA-A34/B71/A26
HLA-DR1


HLA-A9
HLA-DR11


HLA-A9/A25/A32
HLA-DR3/DR6


HLA-A9/A32/B13
HLA-DR4


HLA-B
HLA-DR7


HLA-B12
HLA-DR7/DRÎ2


HLA-B13/B62/B15
HLA-DR8/DR12


HLA-B14
HLA-DR9


HLA-B17
HLA-DRA


HLA-B17/B35/B44
HLA-DRÎ2


HLA-B21/B70/B55
HLA-DRÎ23


HLA-B27/B44/B47
HLA-E


HLA-B35/B57/B75/B77
HLA-G


HLA-B44/B75/B17
HLCS


HLF
HSF4


HLXB9
HSL


HMG14
Hsp105


HMG17
Hsp14


HMG4
Hsp22


HMGB1
HSP25


HMGB2
Hsp27


HMOX1
Hsp40


HMOX2
Hsp47


HNF4α
Hsp60


hnRNPA1
Hsp70


hnRNPC1/C2
Hsp70-2


hnRNPD
Hsp90


hnRNPK
Hsp90α


hnRNPL
Hsp90Î2


hnRNPU
HspA4


hnRNPUL1
HspA6


Homing Receptor
HSPA9


HOXB4
HspB2


HOXB5
HspB7


HP1α
HSV tag


HPa1
HTLV I gp46


HPa2
HTLV I p19


HPD
HtrA2/Omi


HPd1
Human Papillomavirus 16 (E7)


HPd2
Huntingtin


HPi1
HUS1


HPi2
Hydrogen Potassium ATPase I2


HPi3
I-Ak (AÎ ± k)


HPi4
I-Ak (AÎ2k)


HPR1
Ia (B cells)


HPRT1
IBA1


HPV16 E1/E4
IBP2


HPx1
ICAD


HPx2
IDO


Hrk
IFABP


Hsc70
IFN-α


HSD17B1
IFN-Î ± 1


HSD3B1
IFN-Î ± 2Î2


HSF1
IFN-Î2


HSF2
IFN-Î3


IFN-Î32
IgG/IgM/IgA (H/L)


IFN-Î ©
IgG/IgY


IFNA1
IgG1


IFNAR1
IgG1 (heavy chain)


IFT88
IgG1, ΰ


Ig
IgG1, λ


Ig (polyspecific)
IgG1/2a


Ig light chain ΰ
IgG1/3


Ig light chain λ
IgG1a


Ig light chain λ1, λ2, λ3
IgG1b


IgA
IgG2


IgA (Fab2)
IgG2, ΰ


IgA (H)
IgG2, λ


IgA, ΰ
IgG2/3


IgA, Î »
IgG2a


IgA1
IgG2a, ΰ


IgA2
IgG2a, λ


IgD
IgG2a/b


IgD (Î′ heavy chain)
IgG2b


IgDa
IgG2b, ΰ


IgDb
IgG2c


IgE
IgG2c, ΰ


IgE, ΰ
IgG3


IgEa
IgG3, ΰ


IgEb
IgG3, λ


IgG
IgG4


IgG (Fab H/L)
IgGDa


IgG (Fab)
IgK


IgG (Fab2 Fc)
IGKC


IgG (Fab2 H/L)
IgL


IgG (Fab2)
IGLC2


IgG (Fc)
IgM


IgG (H/L)
IgM (Fab2)


IgG (Î3 chain specific)
IgM (Fc)


IgG Fd
IgM (H/L)


IgG light chain
IgM, ΰ


IgG, ΰ
IgM, λ


IgG/IgM
IgMa


IgG/IgM/IgA
IgMb


IgG/IgM/IgA (Fab2 H/L)
IgY


IgG/IgM/IgA (Fab2)
Igâ€ ™s


Ihh
IL-22


Ikaros
IL-22RÎ ± 2


IkBα
IL-23 (p19)


IkBÎ2
IL-23R


IkBζ
IL-24


IKKα
IL-25


IKKÎ2
IL-27


IKKÎ3 p(S376)
IL-27 (p28)


IKKÎμ
IL-27Rα


IL-10
IL-28


IL-11Rα
IL-28Rα


IL-12
IL-29


IL-12 (p35)
IL-3


IL-12 (p70)
IL-31


IL-12 RÎ21
IL-32Î ± Î2Î3Î′


IL-12 RÎ22
IL-32Î ± Î2Î′


IL-12/IL-23 (p40)
IL-33


IL-13
IL-34


IL-15
IL-4


IL-15/IL-15R
IL-4Rα


IL-15Rα
IL-5


IL-16
IL-6


IL-17D
IL-7


IL-17A
IL-7Rα


IL-17A/F
IL-8


IL-17B
IL-9


IL-17C
ILF3


IL-17E
ILK


IL-17F
ILK1


IL-18
ImmunofluorescenceN-Î3


IL-18BP
IMP3


IL-19
Importin9


IL-1RA
Influenza A Virus M2 Protein


IL-1RN
Influenza B Virus Nucleoprotein


IL-1α
ING1


IL-1Î2
ING2


IL-2
ING3


IL-20R2
ING4


IL-20Rα
Inhibin α


IL-20RÎ2
iNOS


IL-21
INPP4A


INPP4B
Integrin Î ± 7


Insulin
ITK


Insulin Degrading Enzyme (IDE)
ITPR1


Insulin Receptor R
Jagged2


Integrin Î ± 4/Î27
JAK2


Integrin Î ± 9/Î21
JAK3


Integrin Î ± V/Î25
JAM2


Integrin Î ± V/Î26
JAML


Integrin Î21 Phospho (Tyr783)
Japanese encephalitis virus NS1 glycoprotein


Integrin Î21 Phospho (Tyr795)
JNK


Integrin Î25
JNK Phospho (Thr183/Tyr185)


Integrin Î26
JNK1/JNK2/JNK3


Integrin Î27
JNK2


Intercalated DNA
Junctional Adhesion Molecule C


Intra Acrosomal Protein
Junctophilin-1 (C-term)


Intra-Acrosomal Proteins
Junctophilin-1 (Mid)


Invariant NK T
Junctophilin-2 (C-term)


IP10
Junctophilin-3 (C-term)


IQGA1
KAP1


IRAK1
KATNA1


IRAK3
KCNH1


IRAK4
KDEL


IRE1
KDM4D


IRF1
Ki-67


IRF3
KIF22


IRF4
KIF3A


IRF5
KIF4A


IRF6
KIFA3


IRF7
Kindlin2


IRF7 (pS477/pS479)
Kinetoplastid Membrane Protein 11 (KMP-1))


IRF8
KIR-2.1


IRF9
KIR-2D (pan CD158)


IRS1
KLF4


IRS1 (pY896)
KLF6


IRS2
KLH


IRS4
KLHL11


ISG15
KLRA3


ISG20
KLRC1


ISL1
KLRG1


Isthmin1


ITCH


KMT4
LDLR


KMT5A
LEF1


KOR-SA3544
Leishmania LPG (repeat epitope)


KS1/4
Leishmania Major Surface Protease (GP-63)


Ksp37
LEKTI


KSR1
Leukemia Inhibitory Factor


Ku70
Leukotriene A4 hydrolase


Ku70/80
Leukotriene B4 Receptor


Ku80
LHX3


Kudoa Thyrsites
LI-Cadherin


Kunitz Protease Inhibitor
LIF


Kv4.2
DNA Ligase I


L/S-MAG
DNA Ligase III


Labeling Check Reagent
LIM kinase 2


Lactate Dehydrogenase
LIME1


Lactate Dehydrogenase B
LIMK1


Lambda
LIMS1


Lamin A
Lin28


Lamin A/C
Lineage Cocktail


Lamin B Receptor
Lipin 1


Lamin B1
LIS1


Lamin B2
Liver Carboxylesterase 1


Lamin C
LKB1


Laminin
LMO2


Laminin 5
LOX


Laminin Receptor
LOX1


Laminin Î21
LRP5/6


LAMP2a
LRP6


LAMP2b
LRPAP1


LAT
LSD1


LAT (pY171)
LSP1


LAT (pY226)
LSS


LBP
LTα


LC3
Luciferase


LC3B
LXRα


LCAT
Ly-108


Lck
Ly-49A


Lck (pY505)
Ly-49A/D


LDH1
Ly-49AB6


LDH1/B/C
Ly-49C/F/I/H


LDL (MDA oxidized)


Ly-49C/I
MadCAM1


Ly-49D
MADD


Ly-49E/F
MADH7


Ly-49F
MAFB


Ly-49G
MAG


Ly-49G2
MAGE-A


Ly-49G2B6
MAGE1


Ly-49H
MAIR2


Ly-49I
MAIR4


Ly-51
MALT1


Ly-6A.2/Ly-6E.1
Mammaglobin A


Ly-6A/E
MAP1LC3A


Ly-6b
MAP2


Ly-6B.2
MAP2B


Ly-6C
MAP2K1IP1


Ly-6D
MAP3K8


Ly-6G
MAP4 Phospho (Ser768)


Ly-6G/C
MAP4K1


Ly-6K
MAP4K4


Ly-77
MAPK12


Lymphotoxin Î2
MAPK6


Lymphotoxin Î2 Receptor
MAPKAP Kinase 2


Lyn
MAPKAP Kinase 2 Phospho (Thr334)


LYRIC
MARCKS


Lysophospholipase 1
MARCO


Lysosomal acid lipase
Marginal Zone B Cells


Lysozome
MARK2


Lysozyme
MARK3


Lyve1
MART1


M-CSF
Mast Cell


M13 Bacteriophage Coat Protein g8p
Mast Cell Protease 11


M13 Bacteriophage Protein
mature macrophage marker


MAA
MBD1


Mac-2BP
MBD2


macroH2A.1
MBL


Macrophage
MCL1


Macrophage Activator
MCM2


Macrophage galactose lectin
MCM3


Macrophage/Granulocyte
MCM4


Macrophages/Monocytes
MCM5


MAD2
MCM6


MCM7
MHC Class I (H-2Dk)


MCP-1
MHC Class I (H-2Dq/Lq)


MCP-4
MHC Class I (H-2Kb)


MCP-8
MHC Class I (H-2Kb/Db)


MCSF
MHC Class I (H-2Kb/Dd)


MD1
MHC Class I (H-2Kd a3 domain)


MD2
MHC Class I (H-2Kd)


MDC
MHC Class I (H-2Kd/Dd)


MECT1
MHC Class I (H-2Kd/Dd/q/u/v)


MEF2A
MHC Class I (H-2Kk)


MEIS1
MHC Class I (H-2Kq)


MEK1
MHC Class I (H-2Ks)


MEK1 (p298)
MHC Class I (H-2Ld)


MEK1 (pS218)/MEK2 (pS222)
MHC Class I (H-2Ld/Db)


MEK1/2 (pS222)
MHC Class Ib (H2-M3)


MEK2
MHC Class II


MEK3
MHC Class II (DQ)


MEK4
MHC Class II (DR)


MEK5
MHC Class II (I-A)


MEK6
MHC Class II (I-A/E)


MEK7
MHC Class II (I-Ab)


MEKK1
MHC Class II (I-Ab/Ad)


MEKK2
MHC Class II (I-Ab/As)


MEKK3
MHC Class II (I-Ad)


MEKK4
MHC Class II (I-Ak)


Melanoma
MHC Class II (I-Ak/Ad/Ab/Aq/Ar)


MELK
MHC Class II (I-Ak/As)


MEMO1
MHC Class II (I-Ap)


Mena
MHC Class II (I-Aq)


Menin
MHC Class II (I-E)


MEOX2
MHC Class II (I-Eΰ)


Merlin
MHC Class II (RT1B)


MERTK
MHC Class II (RT1Bu)


Mesothelin
MHC Class II(RT1D)


Metallothionein
MHC Class II Î2


MetRS
MHC Qa1b


mGluR5
MICA


MGMT
MICA/MICB


MHC Class I
MICB


MHC Class I (H-2Db)
Microfold (M) Cells


MHC Class I (H-2Dd)
Microtubule Associated Protein 2ab


Microtubule Associated Protein RP/EB 2
MPP1


Midkine
MRCL3


Mineralocorticoid Receptor
MRE11


MIP-1Î2
MRGPR-X2


MIPEP
MRI1


Mitochondria
MRP14


Mitofilin
MRP2


Mitofusin 1
MRP3


Mitofusin 2
MRP4


Mitotic Cells
MRP5


MKK6
MRP6


MLH1
MRP8


MLK3
MRP8/14


MLL1
MSC (W8B2)


MLLT11
MSC (W3D5)


MMP1
MSC (W5C5)


MMP10
MSC (W7C6)


MMP11
MSC/NPC


MMP12
MSH2


MMP13
MSH6


MMP14
MSI2H


MMP15
MSK1


MMP17
MST1


MMP19
MST1/MST2


MMP2
MST3


MMP20
MST4


MMP21
MST4/MST3/STK25


MMP26
mTOR


MMP3
Muc-16


MMP8
Muc-2


MMP9
Muc-3


Mnk1
Muc-4


mNOS
Muc-7


MnSOD
MULT-1


Moesin
Munc13-4


Monoamine Oxidase B
Munc18


Monocyte/Granulocyte
MUPP1


Mononuclear Phagocyte
Mus81


Mouse Embryonic Fibroblast (mEF)
Musashi1


Feeder Cells
Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptor 2


Mouse Lineage
muscle Actin


Muscleblind-like 1
NDUFB4


MVP
NDUFS3


MYBBP1A
NEDD8


MYBPC3
NEK2


Myc tag
NEK6


MyD88
NEK7


Myelin Basic Protein
NEK9


Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein
NEK9 Phospho (Thr210)


Myelin PLP
Nestin


Myeloid Antigen
NETO2


Myeloid Cell Nuclear Differentiation Antigen
Neurabin1


Myeloid Lineage
Neuregulin1


Myocilin
Neuregulin3


Myogenin
Neuroblastoma


Myosin heavy chain
NeuroD1


Myosin IIA
NeuroD2


Myosin light chain 2
Neurofibromin


Myosin light chain 3
Neurofilament Heavy Protein


Myosin light chain kinase
Neurofilament Medium Protein


Myosin Phosphatase
Neurogenin 2


Myosin Phosphatase 1/2
Neurokinin 1 Receptor


MYST2
Neuron Specific Enolase


NADH2
Neuronal Growth Factor Receptor


Naf1
Neurotensin Receptor 1


NAK
NFΰB p50/p105


Nanog
NFΰB p65 (pS536)


NAPE-PLD
NFATc1


NAT1
NFΰB p50


Native Lipoteichoic Acid
NFΰB p50/p105


Natriuretic Peptide Receptor A
NFΰB p52/p100


Natural Killer Cell
NFΰB p65


Natural Killer Cell Activation Structures
NFΰB p65 (pS529)


NBS1
NG2


NC1.1
NGF


NCF4
Nhedc2


Nck
NHERF1


NCOA1
Nicastrin


NCOA2
Ninein


NCX1
Nitrotyrosine


NDUFAF1
NKG2A/C/E



NKG2AB6


NKp80
NUMA1


NKX3.1
Nur77


NM23A
O acetyl GD3


NMDA Receptor 2A
2-Oct


NMDA Receptor 2B
Oct3/4


NMDE2
Oct3/4A


NMDZ1
4-Oct


NMNA2
ODAG


nMyc
OGDH


nNOS
OLIG1


NNTM
OLIG2


Nociceptin
Oligodendrocyte Marker


Nod2
Oligodendrocyte Marker O1


Nodal
Oligodendrocyte Marker O4


Noggin
Oncostatin M Receptor


NONO
Orai1


Nonspecific Cytotoxic Cells
OSCAR


Notch1
OSR1


Notch2
Osteonectin


Notch3
Osteopontin


Notch4
Osteoprotegerin


NOX2
Otx2


NOX4
OVA (SIINFEKL) H-2Kb


NOXA2
Oval Cell Marker


NPC
Ovalbumin


NPM-ALK
Ovarian Carcinoma-associated Antigen


NPM/B23 Phospho (Thr199)
OX-62


NPM/B23 Phospho (Thr234/Thr237)
p110Î′


NPY5R
p120 Catenin


NQO1
p120 Catenin (pS268)


NR2E1
p120 Catenin (pS288)


NRC2C
p120 Catenin (pS879)


Nrf2
p120 Catenin (pT310)


NRG3
p120 Catenin (pT916)


NSPA/B
p120 Catenin (pY228)


NTAL
p13


NTF97
p130


Nucleolin
p130 Cas


Nucleolin Phospho (Thr76/Thr84)
p130 Cas (pY249)


Nucleophosmin
p14ARF


NUDC
p150, 95


p19ARF
pan Actin


p21
pan Macrophage


p22phox
Panendothelial Cell Antigen


p23
PAR1


p27Kip1
Parainfluenza Virus type 1


P2RX4
Parainfluenza Virus type 2


P2RY8
Parainfluenza Virus type 3


P2X3
PARC


P2X7
PARD3


P2Y6
PARK7/DJ1


p34Cdc-2
PARP, Cleaved Form


p38
PARP16


p38 MAPK (pT180/pY182)
PARP4


p400
PARVA


p53
Pax2


p53 Acetylated (Lys305)
Pax5


p53 Acetylated (Lys382)
Pax6


p53 Phospho (Ser15)
Pax7


p53 Phospho (Ser37)
Pax8


p53 Phospho (Ser392)
Pax9


p53BP1 (Ser1778)
Paxillin


p57Kip2
Paxillin Phospho (Tyr118)


p60 CAF1
Paxillin Phospho (Tyr31)


p62
PBEF


p63
PBK


p63 (TA)
PBP


p70 S6 Kinase Î2
PBR


p90 Rsk
PBX3


p90 Rsk Phospho (Thr368/Ser372)
PCB


p95 NBS1
PCNA


p97
PCYT1A


PA28Î3
PD-1H


PABP1
PD-ECGF


PABP2
PDC-TREM


PABPN1
PDCD4


PAC1
PDCD6


PAD2
PDE3B


PAG1
PDECGF


PAK1
PDGF-AA


PAK2
PDI


PAK3
PDK1


PDK2
PIAS3


PDPK1
PICK1


PDPK1 (pS241)
PIM1


PDX1
PIM2


PDZK1
Pin1


PE
PINK1


PECR
PIP5K2α


PEI-Transferrinfection
PIP5KIÎ3


Pellino 1
PIR-A/B


Pentraxin 3
Pirh2


PEPD
PIST


Perforin
PiTX3


Peroxiredoxin 1
PIWIL2


Peroxiredoxin 2
PKA RIIα (pS99)


Peroxiredoxin 6
PKA RIIÎ2 (pS114)


PEX5
PKA2Î2


PF4
PKAR2


PGC1α
PKAÎ3


PGIS
PKC


PGP9.5
PKCq


PGRP-Ia
PKCα


PGRP-S
PKCα (pT497)


PHD1
PKCα (pT638)


PHD2
PKCÎ2


Phosphatidylserine
PKCÎ22


Phospho SHIP
PKCÎ3


Phospholipase A2 activator protein (PLAP)
PKCÎ′


Phospholipase C Î23
PKCÎμ


Phospholipase C Î31
PKCζ


Phospholipase D1
PKCÎ,


Phosphoserine/threonine/tyrosine
PKCÏ . . .


Phosphotyrosine
PKN


PI 3 Kinase catalytic subunit α
PKN2


PI 3 Kinase catalytic subunit Î3
PKR


PI 3 Kinase p110 Î2
PKX1


PI 3 Kinase p110 Î′
PLA2G1B


PI 3 Kinase p150
Placental alkaline phosphatase


PI 3 Kinase p85 α
Placental Protein 14


PI 4 kinase Î2
Plakophilin 3


PIAS1
Plastin L



Platelet


PLAU
Prealbumin


PLCÎ31
Presenilin1


PLCÎ31 (pY783)
Presenilin2


PLCÎ32
Prion protein PrP


PLCÎ32 (pY759)
PRKRA


Plectin
PRLR


Pleiotrophin
PRMT1


PlexinA1
PRMT5


PlexinB2
pro Relaxin 1/2


PLGF
pro Relaxin 2


PLK1
Profilin1


PLK1 Phospho (Thr210)
Progesterone Receptor


PLK4
Prohibitin


PLSCR1
Prokineticin 1


PLVAP
Prokineticin 2


PLZF
Prolactin


PMCA(1-4)
ProMBP1


PMCA4
Prostaglandin D2 Receptor


PMEL17/SILV
Prostaglandin dehydrogenase 1


PMN
Prostaglandin E Receptor EP3


PMP70
Prostate Cell Surface Antigen


PMS2
Prostate Specific Antigen


PNAd
Prostatic Acid Phosphatase


PNPH
Proteasome 20S C2


Podocalyxin
Proteasome 20S Î ± 2


Podoplanin
Proteasome 20S Î ± 3


POKEMON
Proteasome 20S Î ± 5


Polyhistidine Tag
Proteasome 20S Î ± 6


PON1
Proteasome 20S Î ± 7


PON3
Proteasome 20SÎ ± 1/2/3/5/6/7


PP2Aα
Protein A


PP2AÎ ± Î2
Protein G


PPM1A
Protein Kinase D2


PPP1A
Protein Phosphatase 1Î2


PPP5C
Protein phosphotase inhibitor 1


PPP6C
Protein S


PR3
Proteinase Activated Receptor 4


PRA1
Prothrombin


PRC1
PSA-NCAM


Pre-BCR
PSD95


Pre-T Cell Receptor Î ± Chain
Pseudomonas Aeruginosa


PSMA
RAD17 Phospho (Ser645)


PSMD14
RAD23A


Psoriasin
RAD51


PTAFR
RAD54


PTBP1
RAD9A


PTEN
Radixin


PTGER2
RAE-1Î3


PTGER4
RAE-1Î′


PTHLH
RAF1


PTK7
RAGE


PTP1B
RAIDD


PTP4A2
Rainbow Trout Ig


PTPS
RalBP1


PTPμ
RanBP9


PTRH2
RanGAP1


PU.1
RAP1A/RAP1B


PU60
RAP1GAP


PUMA
Raptor


PUMAÎ3
RARα


Pumilio1
RAS


Pumilio2
RASGAP


PXR
RASGRF1


PYCARD
RASSF1A


Pygopus2
Rb


Pyk2
Rb (a.a. 332-344)


Pyk2 (pY402)
Rb (pS780)


Pyruvate Dehydrogenase E1α
Rb (pS807/pS811)


Pyruvate Dehydrogenase E2
RbAp46


Pyruvate Dehydrogenase E2/E3bp
RbAp48


q2
RBC


Qa1(b)
RBC (Polyclonal Rabbit)


Qa2
RBM35A


RAB11A
RBP4


RAB25
RBX1


RAB27A
RCC1


RAB4
RcRL6


RAB5a
Red Blood Cell


RAB9
Relaxin 1


Rac1
Relaxin 1/2


Rac1/Cdc42
Relaxin 2


RAD17
RelB


RELMÎ2
ROCK1


RELT
ROR1


Renin
ROR2


RENT1
RORα


Reptin
RORÎ3


Repulsive Guidance Molecule C
ROS


Resistin
RPA32/RPA2


REST
RPA70


Ret
RPS6


Reticular Fibroblasts and Reticular Fibres
RSF1


Reticulon1A
RSK1 p90


Reticulum Cells
RSK2


Retinoblastoma 1
RSK3


RFLAT1
RSK4


RFP
RT1A


RGS6
RT1Aa


RGS7
RT1Aa, b


RGS9
RT1Aa, b, l


RHEB
RT1Ac


Rho
RT1Au


RhoA
RT1B


RHOC
RT6.1


RhoGAP
RT6.2


RhoGDI
Ryanodine Receptor


RIAM
RYK


RICTOR
RyR


RIG1
S-Tag


RIP1
S100A1


RIP2
S100A10


Rituximab
S100A13


RLA DQ
S100A4


RLA DR
S100A6


RNA polymerase II
S100A9


RNA polymerase II CTD repeat YSPTSPS
S100α


RNASE-L
S100Î ± 2


RNASE1
s100Î2


RNF144B
S6 (pS235/pS236)


RNF168
S6 (pS240)


RNF36
S6 (pS244)


RNPEP
S6K



SAA4


Sall4
SIAH2



Salmonella Paratyphi A

SIGIRR



Salmonella Typhimurium

Siglec-10


Salmonid Ig (H and L chain)
Siglec-8


Salmonid Ig (H chain)
Siglec-9


SAM68
Siglec-F


SAMD2
Siglec-H


SAP
SIK2


SARA
SIRT1


SATB1
SIRT2


SATB2
SIRT3


SC5A5
SIRT5


SC6A4
SIT1


SCAI
SIX2


SCD1
SKP1A


Scramblase1
SLA-DR


SCY1-like 3
Slan


SDF1
SLC1A3


SDF1α
SLC1A7


SDHA
SLC22A1


SDHB
SLC22A5


Secretory component
SLC26A6


Securin
SLC26A7


SELP
SLC30A4


Sema4A
SLC39A11


Sema7A
SLC4A3


SENP1
SLC6A19


SEPP1
SLC6A6


SERCA2
SLC7A10


SerpinB1
SLC7A14


SerpinB2
SLC7A3


SerpinB6
SLC7A8


Sestrin1
SLC8A2


SFRP2
SLC9A6


SGK1
SLP76


SHC1
SLP76 (pY128)


Shigella Boydii
SM22α


SHIP1
SMAC


SHP1
SMAC3


SHP2
SMAD1


SHP2 (pY542)
SMAD1 (pS463/465)


SMAD1/5
ssDNA


SMAD1/9
SSEA3


SMAD2
SSEA4


SMAD2/3 (pS465/467) DELETE
SSEA5


SMAD3
SSH3BP1


SMAD4
SSR2


SMAD5
SSR5


SMAD6
SSRP1


SMC1
SSX2IP


SMC1L1
Stat1


SMN
Stat1 (N-Terminus)


Smoothelin
Stat1 (pS727)


SMURF2
Stat1 (pY701)


SNAP25
Stat1α


SNX1
Stat2


SOAT1
Stat3


SOCS1
Stat3 (pS727)


SOCS2
Stat3 (pY705)


SOCS3
Stat4


SOCS6
Stat4 (pY693)


SOD2
Stat5


Sodium Potassium ATPase
Stat5 (pY694)


Sonic Hedgehog
Stat5a


Sortilin
Stat5b


SOSC3
Stat6


SOX1
Stat6 (pY641)


SOX10
Stathmin/Op18 Phospho (Ser16)


SOX17
Stathmin1


SOX18
Stefin B


SOX2
Stem Cell Factor


SOX2 (COOH terminus)
STIM1


SOX2 (NH2 terminus)
STK3


SOX9
STK33


SP-D
STK39


Sp1
STOM


Sp3
STRO1


Spectrin Î ± 1
STUB1


SPHK1
SULT1A1


Spt16
SULT1A3/SULT1A4


Src (pY418)
SULT1C2


SREBP1
SULT2A1


SUMO1
TARDBP


SUMO2
TARP


SUMO3
Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase


SUN1
TAS1R1


Suppressor of Fused
Tau


SUPT16H
TBA1B


Survivin
Tbet


Survivin Phospho (Thr34)
TBK1 (pS172)


SV40 Large T and Small t Antigens
TBX1


SWC1a
TC10


SWC6
TCF3


SYBL1
TCF7L1


Syk
TCF7L2


Syk (pY348)
TCL1


Synapsin I
TCP1α


Synapsin II
TCP1Î2


Synaptojanin2
TCR


Synaptophysin
TCR DO11.10


Syndecan4
TCR HY


SynGAP
TCR VÎ ± 11


Synip
TCR VÎ ± 11.1/11.2b, d


Syntaxin
TCR VÎ ± 2


Syntaxin6
TCR VÎ ± 24


Syntrophin
TCR VÎ ± 24-JÎ ± 18


SYWC
TCR VÎ ± 3.2


T cells (pan reactive)
TCR VÎ ± 3.2b, c


T Lymphocytes
TCR VÎ ± 7.2


T- and B-Cell Activation Antigen
TCR VÎ ± 8


T7 tag
TCR VÎ ± 8.3


TAB1
TCR VÎ21


TACE
TCR VÎ210a


TACI
TCR VÎ210b


TAF172
TCR VÎ211


TAF250
TCR VÎ212


TAG72
TCR VÎ212b


Talin1
TCR VÎ213


Talin2
TCR VÎ213.1


Tamm Horsfall (Uromucoid)
TCR VÎ213.2


TANK1
TCR VÎ213.6


TAP1
TCR VÎ214


TAP2
TCR VÎ216


TCR VÎ217
TCTP


TCR VÎ217α
TdT


TCR VÎ218
Tec


TCR VÎ22
TEF1


TCR VÎ220
TEM8


TCR VÎ221.3
Tenascin C


TCR VÎ222
TER119


TCR VÎ223
TERF2


TCR VÎ23
Terminal-Deoxynucleotidyl Transferase


TCR VÎ24
TERT


TCR VÎ25
Tetranectin


TCR VÎ25.1
TFF3


TCR VÎ25.1/5.2
TFIIB


TCR VÎ25.2
TGF-Î2


TCR VÎ25.3
TGF-Î21


TCR VÎ26
TGF-Î23


TCR VÎ27
TGF-Î2R1


TCR VÎ27.1
TGF-Î2R2


TCR VÎ27.2
TGN38


TCR VÎ28
TGN46


TCR VÎ28.1/8.2
THAP11


TCR VÎ28.2
THEMIS


TCR VÎ28.2/8.3
Thioredoxin


TCR VÎ28.2/8.4
Thioredoxin Reductase 1


TCR VÎ28.3
ThPOK


TCR VÎ28.5
Thrombin Receptor


TCR VÎ29
Thrombocyte


TCR VÎ31.1
Thrombospondin


TCR VÎ31.1/Î31.2
Thymidine Kinase 1


TCR VÎ32
Thyroglobulin


TCR VÎ33
TIA-1


TCR VÎ39
TIAM2


TCR VÎ′1
Tie1


TCR VÎ′2
Tie2 (pY1102)


TCR VÎ′4
Tie2 (pY992)


TCR VÎ′6.3/2
TIF1Î2 Phospho (Ser473)


TCR α
TIGIT


TCR Î ± Î2
Tim1


TCR Î2
Tim2


TCR Î3Î′
Tim3


TCR ζ
Tim3 Fc Fusion Protein


Tim4
TRA-2-49


Tim50
TRA-2-54


Timeless
TRADD


TIMP1
TRAF2


TIMP2
TRAF4


TIP49A
TRAF5


TIRAP
TRAF6


TIS11b
TRAM2


TL1A
Transferrin


TLK1
Transglutaminase


TLR11
Transglutaminase2


TLR12
Transketolase


CD285
TRAP1


TLR7
TRAPPC2


TLR8
TRAPα


TMEFF2
Trem-like 2


TMPS2
Trem-like 4


TMSA
TRIB2


TMTSP
TRIB3


TNAP
TRIM


TNAP3
TRIM25


TNF-α
TRIM29


TNF-Î2
TRK


TNFR Related Protein
TrkA


TNPO3
TrkC


Tollip
Trop2


TOMM20
Tropomyosin 1


TOMM22
TROY


TOP1
TRPC6


TOP2A
TRPM2


TOP2B
TRPM8


TORC2
TRX1


Torsin A
Trypanosoma brucei Major Lysosomal Protein


TOX
Trypanosoma brucei procyclin (EP)


TPH1
Trypanosoma congolense procyclin


TPPP
Trypanosoma cruzi LPG


TPTE
TSC2 Phospho (Ser664)


TR11B
TSC2 Phospho (Thr1462)


TRA-1-60
TSG101


TRA-1-60R
TSHR


TRA-1-81


TSLP
ULBP2


TSLP Receptor
ULBP4


TSPO
ULK3


TTF1
UNC5A


Tubb3
UNC5B


Tuberin
UNG


Tubulin α
uPA


Tubulin Î ± 1B
UQCRC1


Tubulin Î ± 4a
UQCRC2


Tubulin Î ± 3E
Urm1


Tubulin Î ± 8
URP2


Tubulin Î2
USF1


Tubulin Î2 class III
USP11


Tubulin Î24
USP13


Tubulin Î3
USP22


tumor antigens of epithelial origin
USP28


Twist2
USP7


TXNIP
UTF1


TYK2
V5 tag


TYMS
VAMP5/8


Tyro3
VAP1


Tyrosinase
VASA


Tyrosine Hydroxylase
VASP


UACA
VAV1


UBA52
VAV2


UBC9
VAV3


UBE2
VDAC1


UBE2L3
VEGF


UBE2L6
VEGF-120


UBE2M
VEGF-A


UBE2N
VEGF-R1


UBF
VELIS-3


UBF1
VGLU1


Ubiquitin
Villin


UBK63
Vimentin


UCH37
Vinculin


UCK
Viperin


UCP2
VIPR1


UCP3
Vitamin D Binding protein


UFM1
Vitamin D Receptor


ULBP1
Vitronectin


VMAT2
IL-33R


vMyb/cMyb
Globo H


von Willebrands factor
CCL8


VRK1
Siglec-G


VSV-G tag
CD307e


WAPL
CLEC6


WASP
Snail1


WC14
SMAD1 (pS463/pS465)/SMAD8 (pS465/pS467)


WC15
SMAD2 (pS465/pS467)/SMAD3 (pS423/pS425)


wCD44
GSK-3Î2 (pY216)


WIP (pS488)
NKX6.1


WNT1
FAK (pY397)


WNT16
Btk (pY223)/Itk (pY180)


WNT2
ERK3


WNT5B
CD276Î2


WNT6
MCP-3


WSTF
FcÂμR


WWOX
CD238


Xanthine Oxidase
beta2 Microglobulin [b, c]


XBP1
Nucleostemin


XBP1 (COOH terminus)
GPR-49 (Central LRR)


XBPs
GPR-49 (N-Terminal)


XCL1
Phospholipase C Î24


XIAP
coilin


XPC
HNF1Î2


XPNPEP3
Trinitrophenal


XRCC2
Annexin VII


XTP4
CD301a


YAP1
CD301b


YB1
mTOR (pS2448)


YES1
PI16


YY1
MSC (W5C5)


ZAP-70
LAMP5


ZAP-70 (pY292)
GPR-19


ZAP-70 (pY319)
FPRL2


ZAP-70 (pY319)/Syk (pY352)
CXCL5


ZBP-1
PAR2


ZIPK
PDGF-Rα


ZO-1 (Mid)
ULBP6


ZONAB (Mid)


Zyxin


ULBP2/5/6
GPR-44


IL-17B Receptor
Eph Receptor B2


ULBP3
Glypican3


Arginase 1
IFN-Î3R2


Alkaline Phosphatase
IL-17C Receptor


ULBP3
BMPR1B


TrkB
IL-31RA


Osteocalcin
OCIL


IL-22RÎ ± 1
Frizzled-7


APJ
IL-26


IFN-α/Î2 Receptor Subunit 2
GPR-15


FGFR3
PlexinD1


SR-A1
CD158


Rae-1 (pan)
FPR1


CXCL12
HBEGF


TREM2
Vitamin D3


Brachyury
PlexinB1


CLEC5A
Somatostatin Receptor 2


Integrin Î ± 7
OV-6


Mer
CXCL16


XCR1
Siglec-E


AML2
EDG5


von Willebrands factor A2
Ninjurin-1


MMP7
Integrin Î ± 9


GLP-1R
MHC Class II (I-Ed/j/k/p/r/u/v)


FR1
ThB


IL-1RAcP
MAP-2 (2a & 2b)


Claudin-6
IgM μ-chain


Leptin Receptor
MHC Class I (H-2b/p)


Caherin 6
MHC Class I (H-2s/p/q/d/u/r)


IL-1R type II
MHC Class I (H-2s/f)


Nectin4
CDw60


Delta like protein 3
Bad Phospho (Ser112)


ChemR23
Caspase 3 Cleaved (Asp175)


GPR-39
Chk1 Phospho (Ser345)


CD158b2
Chk2 Phospho (Thr68)


IL-10Rα
Cyclin D1 Phospho (Thr286)


LRIG1
cFos Phospho (Ser32)


Neuropilin2
FosB


IL-10RÎ2
GSK-3Î2 (pSer9)


IL-18RÎ2
Histone H3 Acetylated (Lys9)


HS1 Phospho (Tyr397)
ECE1


Hsp27 Phospho (Ser82)
FABP5


ID3
IGSF4C


CD221Î2
Trem-like 1


Phospho-IRAK4 (Thr345/Ser346)
Activin A Receptor Type IIA


Phospho-cJun (Ser73)
ALK7


S6 (pS240/pS244)
BCAM


Syk (pY525/pY526)
BLAME


C23
CEACAM4


Hemoglobin Î2
Claudin-3


CD221α
CLP24


p27
CRHR1


cJun Phospho (Ser63)
DC-STAMP


PPARÎ3
Eph Receptor B3


ENPP1
FATP4


PILRα
FcRL1


PILRÎ2
FcRL2


Twist1
FcRL3


Cadherin M
FSH-R


CD302
Gi24


CD66d
Histamine H1 Receptor


CLEC14A
Neu5Gc


CD242
Lin28A


Syndecan2
IL-33Rα


IL-32α
ATM (pSer1981)


CDO
Integrin Î ± 8


Cryptic
Integrin Î27


Endothelin B Receptor
Integrin Î28


FR3
CD158k


IGSF3
KOR


CD85f
CD85i


Matriptase
LRIG3


MCEMP1
LRP4


mGluR4
MMP16


Stabilin1
MS4A4A


Stabilin2
NAALADase-like 2


Cadherin 13
Neuropeptide Y receptor t ype 1


GPR-109A
Oncostatin M Receptor Î2


TSPAN8
MS4A3


Reg1A
PEAR1


Cadherin 12
PEDF Receptor


PlexinA4
LTBP1


Protocadherin1
TIMP3


ROBO2
VAP-B


ROBO4
WNT9a


EDG8
5HT2C


Scavenger receptor A5
AATK


Semaphorin 4A
ACLP


Semaphorin 4B
ADAMTS15


Semaphorin 6A
alpha 1B Adrenoreceptor


Siglec-16
APLP1


Somatostatin Receptor 3
Fluorescein/Oregon Green


STING
RXR-Î2


GPBAR1
L3MBTL3


TM4SF4
CCL1


TMEM87A
PRDM4


TSPAN2
ACTH


VEGF-R1, 2, 3
PDZ binding kinase


ADAM15
HuC/HuD neuronal protein


Calreticulin2
TDRD3


Complement Factor H-related 4
EP300


CXCL6
Carbonic Anhydrase VI


CD158a/h/b2/f/g
Cholecystokinin A Receptor


Ea52-68 peptide bound to I-Ab
CCL23


HLA-Bw4
CD1e


ATF1 Phospho (Ser63)
Chondrolectin


Epiregulin
Chordin-Like 2


FATP1
Claudin-10b


Fibromodulin
Claudin-11


Furin
Claudin-12


Galanin
Claudin-17


IL-11
CLEC2A


CD306
Coagulation Factor VII


MFG-E8
CXCL1/2/3


MINA
DDR2


Oct4A
DPCR1


OLIG1, 2, 3
Dipeptidyl peptidase 6


Oncostatin M
Epithelial membrane protein 3


Semaphorin 3E
Endoglycan


Slug
Calgranulin C


SOX3
FATP2


STYK1
FATP5


FcRLB
CELSR3


GLP-2R
Coagulation Factor II


GLUT3
DC-SCRIPT


Glypican6
DSCAM-L1


GPR-22
FLRT1


GPR-37
Frizzled-6


GPR-37L1
Glypican1


INSRR
IGSF4B


LINGO1
IL-1R9


LINGO2
BAZ2B


mGluR2
BRD4


mGluR7
Kell


MMP25
Kremen2


Neuromedin B Receptor
LAX1


NRAGE
CD85c


Osteoactivin
MIF


Porimin
Neprilysin2


Prokineticin Receptor 1
OBCAM


Prominin2
PlexinC1


Semaphorin 3A
RGM-B


SLAP-130
Wilmsâ€ ™ Tumor protein 1


Somatostatin Receptor 5
Xg


SCARF1
DCBLD2


STAMP2
ASAM


TAFA3
Desmocollin1


TAFA4
Frizzled-3


TM4SF18
MMP24


Tuberous Sclerosis 1
TOR


TCF8
WNT3a


CMG2
Glypican5


IL-17D Receptor
Jagged1/Jagged2


Macrophage Stimulating Protein Receptor
Pax3


Siglec-11
CELSR2


Syndecan3
Cyclin D1/D2


TGF-Î2R3
PlexinA2


CD85e
TAFA5


SOX7
FR4


Activin A Receptor Type IA
CD315


Carbohydrate Sulfotransferase 15
NKG2I


CD300b
RAMP2



TNFRH3


Biotin
CLEC4G


GPVI
BATF3


MS4A4B
IL-38


PIR-B
Monocarboxylic Acid Transporter 1


Semaphorin 4F
MC5R


IL-1F6
TCF7


CD39L3
TM4SF1


Contactin 3
GPR-49 (CRL Region)


CLEC4B
CD156a


MC3R
ADAM33


PGRP-L
ADAMTS13


PLET1
CCL16


ADAM9
CXCL17


AMIGO3
Deltex1


CD99-L2
FBXO15


Eph Receptor A5
GPR34


Ephrin B2
GPRC5A


CD316
Proinsulin


Kremen1
JAK1


Eph Receptor B1
MEP1A


PlexinB3
Hypocretin receptor 2


DMBT1
p70S6K


FcRn
RAE-1Îμ


LIMPII
STRA6


MUCDHL
FcÎ3RIIA


Patched1
Insulin R/IGF-I R Heterotetramer


SLC39A4
SPARCL1


IGSF4A
Spi-B


PRAT4B
TRAM


HHV8-ORF74
Carboxypeptidase E


4E-BP1 Phospho (Thr36/45)
Islet Cell Autoantigen 1


4E-BP1 Phospho (Thr69)
Patched2


DCAR1
ST8SIA2


Von Hippel-Lindau
AML1 (pS249)


Isotype Control
AMPKÎ21 (pS182)


Granzyme M
BRF1/2


REA Isotype Control
Histone H3 Phospho (Thr11)


CD300LG
MEK1 (pT286)


MR1
MMP16


CD327
MNK Phospho (T197/T202)


B7-H6
NUMB


Hsp27 Phospho (Ser78)
FOXP2


PKCÎ, (pT538)
IFNAR2


SIRT1 (pS47)
REA Control


ZAP-70 (pY493)
CD228


ZAP-70 (pY315/pY319)
Muc-13


sRAGE
P2X7R


mCherry
Btk (pY223/Itk (pY180)


PI 3 Kinase regulatroy subunit α
CD248


TIMP4
GILT


SRC
Recoverin


ZAP-70 (pT493)
Cardiac Troponin I


TSC2 Phospho (S939)
PTF1α


RagC
NKX2.2


SHIP2
HLA-B7/B27


MKK4 (pS257)
Myosin light chain 2a


CD79a (pY182)
Myosin light chain 2v


TRAF1
Epithelial Antigen


EVI1
CD79Î ± cy


SRC3
CD92


SOX11


IL-17F homodimer


CCRL1









In one embodiment, a plurality of hydrogel particles is used to determine the dynamic range and/or sensitivity of detection of a particular cell surface marker or combination thereof on a population of target cells. For example, the population of hydrogel particles can be tuned to have the SSC and/or FSC profile of the target cell, and subpopulations of the hydrogel particle are derivatized with a specific number of copies of a cell surface marker. e.g., a cell surface receptor, or a domain thereof, for example, an epitope binding region thereof. For example, individual subpopulations of hydrogel particles can each be derivatized to have a unique number of copies, e.g., one subpopulation will contain 100 copies of a cell surface marker, a second subpopulation will contain 1,000 copies of the same cell surface marker, a third subpopulation will contain 10,000 copies of the same cell surface marker, etc. The populations of hydrogel particles are fluorescently stained for the respective cell surface marker and fluorescence is detected for hydrogel particles in each subpopulation. In this regard, the subpopulations of hydrogel particles can be used to generate a standard curve of fluorescence emission for target cells with the respective cell marker. The cell surface marker can be any of the cell surface markers provided thereof, or binding regions thereof, or a cell surface marker known to one of ordinary skill in the art.


Hydrogel particles of the disclosure behave similarly to target cells in procedures such as staining and analysis by flow cytometry or FACS. For example, in one embodiment, a hydrogel particle has one or more optical properties substantially similar to one of the cell types set forth in Table 1, Table 2 or Table 3.


In some embodiments, a target cell is an immune cell. Non-limiting examples of immune cells include B lymphocytes, also called B cells, T lymphocytes, also called T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells, monocytes, macrophages, neutrophils, granulocytes, mast cells, platelets, Langerhans cells, stem cells, dendritic cells, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, tumor infiltrating (TIL) cells, gene modified immune cells including hybridomas, drug modified immune cells, and derivatives, precursors or progenitors of any of the cell types listed herein.


In some embodiments, a target cell encompasses all cells of a particular class of cell with shared properties. For example, a target cell can be a lymphocyte, including NK cells, T cells, and B cells. A target cell can be an activated lymphocyte.


In some embodiments, a target cell is a primary cell, cultured cell, established cell, normal cell, transformed cell, infected cell, stably transfected cell, transiently transfected cell, proliferating cell, or terminally differentiated cells.


In one embodiment, a target cell is a primary neuronal cell. A variety of neurons can be target cells. As non-limiting examples, a target cell can be a primary neuron; established neuron; transformed neuron; stably transfected neuron; or motor or sensory neuron.


In other embodiments, a target cell is selected from the group consisting of: primary lymphocytes, monocytes, and granulocytes.


A target cell can be virtually any type of cell, including prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.


Suitable prokaryotic target cells include, but are not limited to, bacteria such as E. coli, various Bacillus species, and the extremophile bacteria such as thermophiles.


Suitable eukaryotic target cells include, but are not limited to, fungi such as yeast and filamentous fungi, including species of Saccharomyces, Aspergillus, Trichoderma, and Neurospora; plant cells including those of con, sorghum, tobacco, canola, soybean, cotton, tomato, potato, alfalfa, sunflower, etc.; and animal cells, including fish, birds and mammals. Suitable fish cells include, but are not limited to, those from species of salmon, trout, tilapia, tuna, carp, flounder, halibut, swordfish, cod and zebrafish. Suitable bird cells include, but are not limited to, those of chickens, ducks, quail, pheasants and turkeys, and other jungle foul or game birds. Suitable mammalian cells include, but are not limited to, cells from horses, cows, buffalo, deer, sheep, rabbits, rodents such as mice, rats, hamsters and guinea pigs, goats, pigs, primates, marine mammals including dolphins and whales, as well as cell lines, such as human cell lines of any tissue or stem cell type, and stem cells, including pluripotent and non-pluripotent, and non-human zygotes.


Suitable cells also include those cell types implicated in a wide variety of disease conditions, even while in a non-diseased state. Accordingly, suitable eukaryotic cell types include, but are not limited to, tumor cells of all types (e.g., melanoma, myeloid leukemia, carcinomas of the lung, breast, ovaries, colon, kidney, prostate, pancreas and testes), cardiomyocytes, dendritic cells, endothelial cells, epithelial cells, lymphocytes (T-cell and B cell), mast cells, eosinophils, vascular intimal cells, macrophages, natural killer cells, erythrocytes, hepatocytes, leukocytes including mononuclear leukocytes, stem cells such as hematopoietic, neural, skin, lung, kidney, liver and myocyte stem cells (for use in screening for differentiation and de-differentiation factors), osteoclasts, chondrocytes and other connective tissue cells, keratinocytes, melanocytes, liver cells, kidney cells, and adipocytes. In certain embodiments, the cells are primary disease state cells, such as primary tumor cells. Suitable cells also include known research cells, including, but not limited to, Jurkat T cells, NIH3T3 cells, CHO, COS, etc. See the ATCC cell line catalog, hereby expressly incorporated by reference.


In some embodiments, a target cell is a tumor macrovesicle or tumor macrovesicle. Tumor microvesicles, also known as tumor-secreted microvesicles or tumor-secreted exosomes, can be found in circulating blood and may have immune-suppressive activities. Tumor microvesicles typically range in size from 30-200 nm in diameter. Larger tumor micro vesicles may be referred to as tumor macro vesicles, and can range in size from 3-10 μm in diameter.


The hydrogel particles described herein can be employed in any flow cytometer known to those of ordinary skill in the art. For example, one or more of the flow cytometers provided in Table 9 below are amenable for use with the hydrogels and assays described herein.









TABLE 9







Instruments for use with embodiments described herein








Instrument
Manufacturer





MACSQuant ® Analyzer 10
Miltenyi


MACSQuant ® VYB
Miltenyi


BD FACSCalibur ™
BD Biosciences


BD FACSCanto ™ High Throughput Sampler
BD Biosciences


BD FACSCanto II
BD Biosciences


BD FACSCanto ™
BD Biosciences


BD FACSCount ™
BD Biosciences


BDAccuri ™ C6
BD Biosciences


BD LSRFortessa ™ X-20
BD Biosciences


BD FACSCanto ™ II
BD Biosciences


BD LSR II
BD Biosciences


BD LSRFortessa ™
BD Biosciences


BD FACSVerse ™
BD Biosciences


BD FACSAria ™ Fusion
BD Biosciences


BD FACSAria ™
BD Biosciences


BD FACSAria ™ III
BD Biosciences


BD FACSJazz ™
BD Biosciences


BD Influx ™
BD Biosciences


Fortessa X50.
BD Biosciences


FlowSight Flow Cytometer
Millipore


Guava easyCyte 6-2L Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


guava easyCyte 5HT Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


guava easyCyte 8 Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


guava easyCyte 5 Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


guava easyCyte 8HT Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


guava easyCyte 6HT-2L Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


ImageStreamX Mark II Imaging Flow Cytometer
Millipore


Muse Cell Analyzer
Millipore


guava easyCyte 12HT Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


guava easyCyte 12 Benchtop Flow Cytometer
Millipore


S3e ™ Cell Sorter
Bio-Rad


S3 ™ Cell Sorter
Bio-Rad


Avalon Cell Sorter
Bio-Rad/Propel Labs


CytoFLEX
Beckman Coulter


FP 1000 Cell Preparation System
Beckman Coulter


Vi-CELL ® XR Cell Viability Analyzer
Beckman Coulter


FC 500 Series
Beckman Coulter


MoFlo ® Astrios ™
Beckman Coulter


Coulter Epics XL ™ and XL-MCL ™
Beckman Coulter


Gallios ™
Beckman Coulter


CyAn ™ ADP Analyzer
Beckman Coulter


Attune ™ Acoustic Focusing Cytometer
Life Technologies


Attune ® NxT Acoustic Focusing Cytometer
Life Technologies


EVOS
Life Technologies


Countess II FL
Life Technologies


EC800 Cell Analyzer
Sony


SH800 Cell Sorter
Sony


SP6800 Spectral Analyzer
Sony


SY3200 Cell Sorter
Sony


A50-Micro′
Apogee Flow Systems


A50-Universal
Apogee Flow Systems


Auto40
Apogee Flow Systems


FlowSight
Amnis


ImageStreamX Mark II
Amnis


JSAN
Bay Bioscience


CytoSense
CytoBuoy


CytoSub
CytoBuoy


CytoSense
CytoBuoy


CytoBuoy
CytoBuoy


Cytonome Viva ™ G1
CYTONOME


GigaSort ™
CYTONOME


Hydris
CYTONOME


Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer
Agilent Technologies


NovoCyte
ACEA Biosciences


CyFlow ® Space
Partec technology


CyFlow ® Cube 8
Partec technology


CyFlow ® Cube 6
Partec technology


CyFlow ® Ploidy Analyser
Partec technology


CyFlow ® Counter
Partec technology


CyFlow ® miniPOC
Partec technology


CyFlow ® SL
Partec technology


CyFlow ® Sorter
Partec technology


CyFlow ® CCA
Partec technology


CyFlow ® Oenolyser
Partec technology


NucleoCounter ® NC-3000 ™
Chemometec


NucleoCounter ® NC-250 ™
Chemometec


NucleoCounter ® NC-200 ™ - High Precision Cell
Chemometec


Counter


HPC-100 Portable Flow Cytometer
Cronus Technologies Ltd


Cytell Cell Imaging System
GE Healthcare


MAGPIX
Luminex


Luminex ® 100/200 ™ System
Luminex


FLEXMAP 3D ®
Luminex


ImageXpress ® Velos Laser Scanning Cytometer
molecular devices


ClonePix ™ 2
molecular devices


SpectraMax ® i3
molecular devices


AQ1 Discrete Analyzer
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


AQ2 Discrete Analyzer
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


AQ400 Discrete Analyzer
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


AQUA 900
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


AA3 HR AutoAnalyzer
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


AA1 AutoAnalyzer
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


QuAAtro39
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


Infralyzer 2000
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


Technicon AutoAnalyzer II (AAII)
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


Technicon/Bran + Luebbe TrAAcs 800-2000
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


Bran + Luebbe FIA Analyzer
SEAL Analytical Ltd.


BioSorter ® Large Particle Flow Cytometer
Union Biometrica, Inc.


COPAS ™ Large Particle Flow Cytometers
Union Biometrica, Inc.


Cellometer Mini Cell Counter
Nexcelom


Cellometer Auto T4 Cell Viability Counter
Nexcelom


Cellometer Auto X4 Cell Viability Counter
Nexcelom


Cellometer Auto 1000 Cell Viability Counter
Nexcelom


Cellometer Auto 2000 Cell Viability Counter
Nexcelom


Cellometer Vision CBA
Nexcelom


Celigo S
Nexcelom


NovoCyte ™ 1000
ACEA


NovoCyte ™ 2000
ACEA


NovoCyte ™ 2060
ACEA


NovoCyte ™ 3000
ACEA


HPC-100
Handyem


S1000EXi
Stratedigm


SE520Xi
Stratedigm


Sysmex ® DI-60
Sysmex


CellaVision ® DM96
Sysmex


CellaVision ® DM1200
Sysmex


Cytation
BioTek


EasyCell Assistant
Medica


IN Cell Analyzer
GE Healthcare







Fluorish List








Big Blue
BD Biosciences


Kermit
Miltenyi


ac6
BD Biosciences


srDAs
BD Biosciences


a
BD Biosciences


FACSCanto II Immunology
BD Biosciences


Test Cyt
Millipore


milt
Miltenyi


ac
BD Biosciences


ietest
BD Biosciences


Curiel's Aria
BD Biosciences


AttuneÅ ® Acoustic Focusing Cytometer Blue/Violet
Life Technologies


Medawar LSRII
BD Biosciences


Medawar Calibur
BD Biosciences


FACSAria INER
BD Biosciences


Attune R/A
Life Technologies


Fortessa
BD Biosciences


Aria
BD Biosciences


SORTER
BD Biosciences


Cyan
Beckman Coulter


LSR II
BD Biosciences


ARIA
BD Biosciences


Canto II
BD Biosciences


F09 - LSR Fortessa 1
BD Biosciences


“The Hoff”
BD Biosciences


6th Floor Hess Fortessa A
BD Biosciences


Cerebro BDFACSAriaII
BD Biosciences


Mystique BDFACSAriaIII
BD Biosciences


Godzilla BDFACSAriaII
BD Biosciences


Wolverine BDFACSAriaII
BD Biosciences


Megatron BDFACSAriaII
BD Biosciences


Megatron BDFACSAriaII
BD Biosciences


Fortessa B
BD Biosciences


6 colour Canto II
BD Biosciences


10 colour LSR II
BD Biosciences


4 laser 13 colour Influx sorter
BD Biosciences


14 colour X20
BD Biosciences


SORP
BD Biosciences


FACSAria INER
BD Biosciences


LSR561
BD Biosciences


Fortessa FCF UZH
BD Biosciences


LSR 2 B
BD Biosciences


LSRII-C
BD Biosciences


Cal 3
BD Biosciences


Aria II A
BD Biosciences


LSR 16
BD Biosciences


LSB Fortessa
BD Biosciences


IMMUN LSRII
BD Biosciences


IRC
BD Biosciences


UV LSR
BD Biosciences


5 Laser Aria
BD Biosciences


Curiel's LSR II
BD Biosciences


LSR Fortessa
BD Biosciences


Mauzeroll Aria
BD Biosciences


Frenette
BD Biosciences


Fallon
Beckman Coulter


Galios
Beckman Coulter


LSRIIFortessa
BD Biosciences


FACSCanto II CLSB
BD Biosciences


LSR II SC
BD Biosciences


UNCA Fortessa
BD Biosciences


VERSE
BD Biosciences


ARIAII
BD Biosciences


ARIAIII
BD Biosciences


F09 - BD LSRFortessa
BD Biosciences


HMRI FACSCanto II A
BD Biosciences


HMRI FACSCantoII B(HTS)
BD Biosciences


HMRI Aria III
BD Biosciences


L2
BD Biosciences


UoN Canto
BD Biosciences


LSRII M902
BD Biosciences


Fortessa 1
BD Biosciences


F05 - FACSAria
BD Biosciences


F02 - FACSAria III
BD Biosciences


F10 - BD FACSAria III
BD Biosciences


F03 - Guava
Millipore


Aria Blue 11 Color
BD Biosciences


Aria Red
BD Biosciences


Aria Orange
BD Biosciences


Aria Cyan
BD Biosciences


Aria Emerald
BD Biosciences


Aria Silver BSL3
BD Biosciences


LSR Fortessa
BD Biosciences


LSRII Bldg 4
BD Biosciences


LSR Fortessa bldg 4
BD Biosciences


CANTO II Bldg 50
BD Biosciences


4 Laser LSR II
BD Biosciences


5 Laser LSR II
BD Biosciences


FACSArray BL-2
BD Biosciences


FACSCalibur
BD Biosciences


DUAL for long term studies
BD Biosciences


MoFlo 1095 Production only
Beckman Coulter


BL-2 FACSAria III sorter
BD Biosciences


Astrios BL-2 sorter
Beckman Coulter


Tessy
BD Biosciences


LSR II-1
BD Biosciences


Fortessa
BD Biosciences


4 laser AriaIII
BD Biosciences


LSRFortessa
BD Biosciences


UoN FACSAria II cell sorter
BD Biosciences


Door
Beckman Coulter


Fortessa
BD Biosciences


WCI - FACSAria I
BD Biosciences


LSRII Karp8
BD Biosciences


Karp 8
BD Biosciences


Canto
BD Biosciences


Aria sorter
BD Biosciences


DI lab
BD Biosciences


DI FACSAria
BD Biosciences


Constance
BD Biosciences


DI FACSAria III
BD Biosciences


WCI_FACS Canto
BD Biosciences


MACSQuant 10
Miltenyi


VAMC Memphis LSR
BD Biosciences


VAMC Memphis S3
Bio-Rad


ARIA INER
BD Biosciences


Uhura
BD Biosciences


Kirk
BD Biosciences


Data
Millipore


Spock
BD Biosciences


McCoy
BD Biosciences









EXAMPLES

The present invention is further illustrated by reference to the following Examples. However, it should be noted that these Examples, like the embodiments described above, are illustrative and are not to be construed as restricting the scope of the invention in any way.


Example 1: Generation of Hydrogel Particles

Photomasks for UN lithography were sourced from CADart Services Inc. and were designed using AutoCad (AutoDesk, Inc.). SU-8 photo resist (Microchem, Inc.) was photo crosslinked on 4″ silicon wafers using a collimated UV light source (OAI, Inc.) to create masters for microfluidic device fabrication. PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane, Sigma Aldrich, Inc.) was prepared and formed using standard published methods for soft lithography and microfluidic device fabrication (See, McDonald J C, et al., 2000, Electrophoresis 21:27-40).


Droplets were formed using flow-focusing geometry where two oil channels focus a central stream of aqueous monomer solution to break off droplets in a water-in-oil emulsion. A fluorocarbon-oil (Novec 7500 3M, Inc.) was used as the outer, continuous phase liquid for droplet formation. To stabilize droplets before polymerization, a surfactant was added at 0.5% w/w to the oil phase (ammonium carboxylate salt of Krytox 157 FSH, Dupont). To make the basic polyacrylamide gel particle, a central phase of an aqueous monomer solution containing N-acrylamide (1-20% w/v), a cross-linker (N,N′-bisacrylamide, 0.05-1% w/v), an accelerator, and ammonium persulfate (1% w/v) was used. An accelerator, (N,N,N′,N′tetramethylethylenediamine (2% vol %) was added to the oil-phase in order to trigger hydrogel particle polymerization after droplet formation.


Several co-monomers were added to the basic gel formulation to add functionality. Allyl-amine provided primary amine groups for secondary labeling after gel formation. We modulated forward scatter by adjusting the refractive index of the gel by adding co-monomers allyl acrylate and allyl methacrylate. Side scattering of the droplets was tuned by adding a colloidal suspension of silica nanoparticles and/or PMMA (poly(methyl methacrylate)) particles (˜100 nm) to the central aqueous phase prior to polymerization.


Stoichiometric multiplexing of the hydrogel particles was achieved by utilizing co-monomers containing chemically orthogonal side groups (amine, carboxyl, maleimide, epoxide, alkyne, etc.) for secondary labeling.


Droplets were formed at an average rate of 5 kHz and were collected in the fluorocarbon oil phase. Polymerization was completed at 50° C. for 30 minutes, and the resulting hydrogel particles were washed from the oil into an aqueous solution.


Example 2: Generation and Visualization of 12.11 m Hydrogel Particles

Water containing 5% acrylamide, 0.25% bisacrylamide, 0.05% allyl amine, and 0.1% ammonium persulfate was flowed through a center channel and focused by oil containing 0.1% TEMED through a 10 micron nozzle to produce 10 μm hydrogel particles, shown in FIG. 3A. Following polymerization, the particles were washed in water, shown in FIG. 3B, and conjugated to dyes of interest. The fluorescent hydrogel particles were visualized with fluorescence microscopy, shown in FIG. 3C.


Example 3: Multidimensional Tuning of Hydrogel Particle Optical Properties

As depicted in FIG. 4, hydrogel particles are tuned in multiple dimensions to match specific cell types unlike polystyrene beads. Cells are deconvolved using combinations of optical parameters such as FSC and SSC (FIG. 4A) or secondary markers. Hydrogel particles are tuned to match the SSC and FSC of specific cell types unlike polystyrene beads (brown) which are limited in size (FSC) and side scattering (FIG. 4B). Hydrogel particles are further functionalized with stoichiometrically tuned ratios of specific chemical side-groups and secondary labels allowing the cell type to be precisely matched without suffering from biological noise as fixed cell lines do (FIG. 4C).


Example 4: Flow Cytometer Delay Time as a Function of Hydrogel Particle Diameter

As shown in FIG. 5, the inter-drop delay for a flow cytometer can be precisely correlated to hydrogel particle diameter. Data are shown for hydrogel particles of 3, 6, 10, 32, and 50 μm diameters using flow cytometer nozzle sizes of 70 and 100 μm.


Example 5: Comparison of Hydrogel Particles with Encapsulated DNA to Cells

To form hydrogel particles with encapsulated DNA, 40 μg/mL-1000) μg/mL of reconstituted calf thymus DNA was added to a polymer mix containing 20% 19:1 (acrylamide:bis-acrylamide) and 0.1% allyl amine in water, 0.4% ammononiumpersulfate was added to the mix prior to droplet formation. Hydrogel particles were formed as described in Example 1. Hydrogel particles with 200 μg/mL of encapsulated calf thymus DNA displayed cell-like staining using propidium iodide as visualized using a commercial imaging cytometer and compared to Chinese Hamster Ovary cells stained using the same procedure. Images were obtained using a Nexcelom Cellometer™ (FIG. 6).


Cells obtained from a buccal swab were washed in PBS and stained with propidium iodide. In parallel, populations of hydrogel particles containing a range of DNA concentrations were also stained in the same manner. Both the cell and particle suspensions were analyzed on a flow cytometer (488/590 nm excitation/emission). Flow cytometry analysis of check cells and the same range of encapsulated DNA particles showed that the particles display a range of cell-like fluorescent properties (FIG. 7, lf panel). The intensity of staining shows a linear correlation with the median intensity as measured by flow cytometry (FIG. 7, right panel).


Example 6: Tuning of Hydrogel Particle Side Scattering

Colloidal silica was added at 12.5%, 6.25%, 3.125% and 0% to the aqueous fraction of the polymer mix and hydrogel particles were formed as described in Example 1. Forward and side scattering data were obtained using a flow cytometer. The results showed that side scatter signal (FIG. 8, left panel) increased with higher percentages of encapsulated nanoparticles while forward scatter (FIG. 8, right panel) remained generally unchanged, demonstrating the independent tuning of side scatter and forward scatter.


Example 7: Tuning of Hydrogel Particle Forward Scattering

In this experiment, the percentage of acrylamide:bis-acrylamide in the hydrogel composition was varied from between 10 and 40% to tune the refractive index of the hydrogel particles as measured by forward scattering in a flow cytometer. As shown in FIG. 9, the forward scattering increased with increasing percentages of acrylamide: bisacrylamide as a fraction of water.


Example 8: Tuning of Hydrogel Particle Optical Properties

An example of tuning hydrogel particles to match optical properties of a desired cell subtype. Co/monomers can be combined with nanoparticles to tune both forward and side scatter properties of the hydrogels using passive optical measurements in a flow cytometer. By combining these properties with chemically labile co-monomers (e.g. allyl amine, acrylic acid), additional fluorophores/proteins/biological side groups can be added and labeled (if desired) in order to match cell subpopulation staining in addition to scattering properties. These are the three primary metric by which cells are identified using flow cytometry. Additional side groups, such as those containing heavy metals, can be used for Cy-TOF (cytometry, time of flight mass spectrometry) calibration for example. Finally, biocompatible material can be encapsulated to mimic subcellular organelle staining.


Example 9: Tuning of Hydrogel Particle Optical Properties

A 50 nm nanoparticle colloidal suspension was incorporated into the hydrogel matrix to mimic the optical properties of lymphocytes and monocytes (FIGS. 13A and 13B). The percent composition of the suspension was altered to match the blood cell subpopulations from the blood sample control (Streck) (FIG. 13C).


Specifically, the concentration of the acrylamide monomer (0.7-0.8 M) of the hydrogel particle was adjusted to increase the forward scatter of the particles to match blood cell subpopulations. The percentage of bisacrylamide cross linker can also be changed to affect forward scatter (1-5%). Silica nanoparticles were used at 5% or 10% in the compositions to adjust side scatter. The results of this experiment are shown in FIG. 13.


All, documents, patents, patent applications, publications, product descriptions, and protocols which are cited throughout this application are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties for all purposes.


The embodiments illustrated and discussed in this specification are intended only to teach those skilled in the art the best way known to the inventors to make and use the invention. Modifications and variation of the above-described embodiments of the invention are possible without departing from the invention, as appreciated by those skilled in the art in light of the above teachings. It is therefore understood that, within the scope of the claims and their equivalents, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.

Claims
  • 1. A cell mimic composition, comprising: a) a population of polymer particles; andb) an aqueous solution;
  • 2. The composition of claim 1, wherein the optical-scatter property that is substantially similar to the corresponding optical-scatter property of the natural biological cell counterpart is side scatter (SSC).
  • 3. The composition of claim 1, wherein the optical-scatter property that is substantially similar to the corresponding optical-scatter property of the natural biological cell counterpart is forward scatter (FSC).
  • 4. The composition of claim 1, wherein the optical-scatter property that is substantially similar to the corresponding optical-scatter property of the natural biological cell counterpart comprises SSC and FSC.
  • 5. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a scatter-modulating additive.
  • 6. The composition of claim 5, wherein the scatter-modulating additive comprises a suspension of nanoparticles encapsulated within the polymer particles.
  • 7. The composition of claim 5, wherein the scatter-modulating additive comprises colloidal silica encapsulated within the polymer particles.
  • 8. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a nucleic acid.
  • 9. The composition of claim 1, wherein the natural biological cell counterpart is selected from the group consisting of a lymphocyte, a monocyte, and a granulocyte.
  • 10. The composition of claim 1, wherein the natural biological cell counterpart is selected from the group consisting of an erythrocyte, a megakaryocyte, an epidermal langerhans cell, an osteoclast, a dendritic cell, a microglial cell, a mast cell, a helper T cell, a suppressor T cell, a natural killer T cell, a B cell, a lymphocyte, a monocyte, and a granulocyte.
  • 11. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a secondary marker profile that is substantially similar to a corresponding secondary marker profile of the natural biological cell counterpart.
  • 12. The composition of claim 11, wherein the secondary marker profile is a fluorescence marker profile.
  • 13. The composition of claim 11, wherein the secondary marker profile is associated with a heavy metal.
  • 14. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a polymerized monomer.
  • 15. The composition of claim 14, wherein the polymer particles comprise a co-monomer.
  • 16. The composition of claim 14, wherein the polymerized monomer is a bifunctional monomer.
  • 17. The composition of claim 14, wherein the polymerized monomer is a biodegradable monomer.
  • 18. The composition of claim 17, wherein the biodegradable monomer is a monosaccharide, disaccharide, polysaccharide, peptide, protein, or protein domain.
  • 19. The composition of claim 17, wherein the biodegradable monomer is a structural polysaccharide.
  • 20. The composition of claim 17, wherein the biodegradable monomer is selected from the group consisting of agar, agarose, alginic acid, alguronic acid, alpha glucan, amylopectin, amylose, arabinoxylan, beta-glucan, callose, capsulan, carrageenan polysaccharide, cellodextrin, cellulin, cellulose, chitin, chitosan, chrysolaminarin, curdlan, cyclodextrin, alpha-cyclodextrin, dextrin, dextran, ficoll, fructan, fucoidan, galactoglucomannan, galactomannan, galactosaminogalactan, gellan gum, glucan, glucomannan, glucuronoxylan, glycocalyx, glycogen, hemicellulose, homopolysaccharide, hypromellose, icodextrin, inulin, kefiran, laminarin, lentinan, levan polysaccharide, lichenin, mannan, mixed-linkage gluxan, paramylon, pectic acid, pectin, pentastarch, phytoglycogen, pleuran, polydextrose, polysaccharide peptide, porphyran, pullulan, schizophyllan, sinistrin, sizofiran, welan gum, xanthan gum, xylan, xyloglucan, zymosan, and a combination thereof.
  • 21. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a biomolecule.
  • 22. The composition of claim 21, wherein polymer particles comprise a plurality of different biomolecules.
  • 23. The composition of claim 21, wherein the biomolecule is selected from Table 8.
  • 24. The composition of claim 21, wherein the biomolecule is selected from the group consisting of IL15, IL21, CD137, CD4, CD8, CD16, CD56, and CD19.
  • 25. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a polymerized monomer, and wherein the optical scatter property of the polymer particles is at least partially tuned by chemical modification of the polymerized monomer.
  • 26. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a monomer and co-monomer, and wherein the optical scatter property of the polymer particles is at least partially tuned by modulating the amount of monomer and co-monomer.
  • 27. The composition of claim 1, wherein the polymer particles comprise a polymerized monomer, and wherein the optical scatter property of the polymer particles is at least partially tuned by modulating the amount of polymerization initiator or cross linker used to polymerize the monomer.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. Pat. App. Ser. No. 18/139,741, filed Apr. 26, 2023, which is a continuation of U.S. Pat. App. Ser. No. 17/990,360, filed Nov. 18, 2022, now U.S. Pat. No. 11,686,661, which in turn is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/933,028, filed Jul. 20, 2020, now U.S. Pat. No. 11,747,261, which in turn is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/625,394, filed Jun. 16, 2017, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,753,846, which in turn is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/018,769, filed Feb. 8, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,714,897, which in turn claims priority to and benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/114,004, filed Feb. 9, 2015 and U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/184,192, filed Jun. 24, 2015; each of the aforementioned applications is incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.

Provisional Applications (2)
Number Date Country
62184192 Jun 2015 US
62114004 Feb 2015 US
Continuations (5)
Number Date Country
Parent 18139741 Apr 2023 US
Child 18417986 US
Parent 17990360 Nov 2022 US
Child 18139741 US
Parent 16933028 Jul 2020 US
Child 17990360 US
Parent 15625394 Jun 2017 US
Child 16933028 US
Parent 15018769 Feb 2016 US
Child 15625394 US