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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June
24, 2003
Guava
Technologies' has announced that Life Science researchers can accelerate
their research by detecting cell health earlier using their unique
ViaCount assay.
Early
detection of cell health accelerates research
Guava
Technologies' has announced that Life Science researchers can accelerate
their research by detecting cell health earlier using their unique
ViaCount assay.
Using
Guava's proprietary ViaCount assay, biologists can now get a more
complete assessment of the health of living cells employed in research
and biopharmaceutical production than is possible using the standard
approach of Trypan Blue-based dye exclusion. By enabling biologists
to accurately detect and quantify apoptotic cells simultaneously
with their analysis of cell viability, Guava Technologies' ViaCount
assay enables users to detect problems in cell cultures much earlier,
saving time and money.
Trypan
Blue exclusion is the most widely accepted and widely used method
for enumerating living and dead cells in culture. Individual cells
within a single culture may vary substantially in the amount of
dye absorbed, making interpretation of results subjective, even
when researchers use newer automated methods of assessing cell viability
by Trypan Blue staining. Moreover, several published research studies
have demonstrated that Trypan Blue methods, both manual and automated,
consistently over-estimate the number of viable cells in a cell
population.
'Since
we've acquired the Guava PCA, we no longer use hemacytometers to
perform viable cell counts,' said Jennie Mather, CEO & President,
Raven Technologies. 'Furthermore, the Guava PCA system is a major
advance in our ability to rapidly and easily measure most of the
parameters important in cell biology. '
Rather
than looking at the generalised staining of cells based solely on
membrane integrity, Guava ViaCount employs a combination of dyes
that specifically bind to DNA. The first of these dyes penetrates
membranes, entering and staining the DNA of all nucleated cells.
The second is a viability dye that penetrates and stains DNA in
dead and dying cells with compromised membrane integrity, and is
excluded by cells with intact membranes. Cells that take up intermediate
amounts of the viability dye also react with Annexin V, indicating
they have entered the apoptotic pathway leading to cell death. Moreover,
dye that is not bound to DNA does not produce a fluorescent signal,
further improving resolution of the ViaCount assay.
Guava
Technologies is offering researchers a new technical paper on Guava
ViaCount and its advantages over Trypan Blue-exclusion staining
entitled, 'A Better Alternative to Traditional Methods for Cell
Counting and Viability Assessments? New Platform for a Broad Range
of Cell-Based Assays.' Copies of this article can be accessed from
the Guava Technologies website at www.guavatechnologies.com under
the Literature Request section.
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