Enhancing reproducibility in single cell research with biocytometry: An inter-laboratory study
- Pavel Fikarn(Author),
- Laura Alvarezn(Author),
- Laura Bernen(Author),
- Martin Ciencialan(Author),
- Christopher Kann(Author),
- Hynek Kasln(Author)
- ,
- bUniversity of New Hampshire Manchester,
- cSaint Michael’s College,
- dPenn State Harrisburg,
- eOuachita Baptist University,
- fHendrix College
Open access
Abstract
Biomedicine today is experiencing a shift towards decentralized data collection, which promises enhanced reproducibility and collaboration across diverse laboratory environments. This inter-laboratory study evaluates the performance of biocytometry, a method utilizing engineered bioparticles for enumerating cells based on their surface antigen patterns. In centralized and aggregated inter-lab studies, biocytometry demonstrated significant statistical power in discriminating numbers of target cells at varying concentrations as low as 1 cell per 100,000 background cells. User skill levels varied from expert to beginner capturing a range of proficiencies. Measurement was performed in a decentralized environment without any instrument cross-calibration or advanced user training outside of a basic instruction manual. The results affirm biocytometry to be a viable solution for immunophenotyping applications demanding sensitivity as well as scalability and reproducibility and paves the way for decentralized analysis of rare cells in heterogeneous samples.
