agar and Hematologic-Neoplasms

agar has been researched along with Hematologic-Neoplasms* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for agar and Hematologic-Neoplasms

ArticleYear
Measuring Survival of Hematopoietic Cancer Cells with the Colony-Forming Assay in Soft Agar.
    Cold Spring Harbor protocols, 2016, 08-01, Volume: 2016, Issue:8

    Colony-forming assays measure the ability of cells in culture to grow and divide into groups. Any cell that has the potential to form a colony may also have the potential to cause cancer or relapse in vivo. Colony-forming assays also provide an indirect measurement of cell death because any cell that is dead or dying will not continue to proliferate. The proliferative capacity of adherent cells such as fibroblasts can be determined by growing cells at low density on culture dishes and counting the number of distinct groups that form over time. Cells that grow in suspension, such as hematopoietic cells, cannot be assayed this way because the cells move freely in the media. Assays to determine the colony-forming ability of hematopoietic cells must therefore be performed in solid matrices that restrict large-scale movement of the cells. One such matrix is soft agar. This protocol describes the use of soft agar to compare the colony-forming ability of untreated hematopoietic cells to the colony-forming ability of hematopoietic cells that have been treated with a cytotoxic agent.

    Topics: Agar; Animals; Cell Survival; Colony-Forming Units Assay; Hematologic Neoplasms; Humans

2016