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What Is HCA?What is HCS?Why Use HCA/HCS?IN Cell Analyzer
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Benefits for a wide variety of cellular assays

HCA can offer an extra dimension, whatever your cellular research involves, allowing complex studies that provide new insights that simply would not be possible with other methods.

Increase productivity and throughput - Reduces assay times from weeks to days or days to hours, enabling more data to be produced faster

Investigate in breadth - Hypotheses can be rigorously tested  by correlating the effects observed and quantified directly in cells with results from other techniques

Improve data quality - Make your cell analysis objective, not subjective. Single cell analysis in multiple wells enables easy quantification, with multiple controls providing increased data confidence and statistically relevant results

Investigate in depth - Automated, multiplexed imaging assays in live cells enable non-destructive monitoring  of complex signaling events as they happen, as well as analyzing proteins, nucleic acids and cell morphology in a single experiment.

The benefits of HCA apply to a wide variety of cellular assays including cell signaling, toxicology, RNAi knockdown, cell differentiation and morphology, cell cycle, neurology, protein trafficking, and receptor activation. However, with the increased use of HCA in mainstream cellular research, the possibilities of the technology are constantly expanding.

More information in less time

HCA is a natural evolution of cellular research, enabling you to perform more complex experiments on a larger scale, with more controls and replicates in a shorter time. The information-rich environment it provides allows you to be more productive in your scientific objectives.

Learn more - Even a single parameter molecular readout  (e.g. protein expression or phosphorylation level) can be assessed in combination with associated changes in cell number and morphology
Gain new insights - Multiplex assays to provide a higher level of understanding. Ask questions that are difficult or impossible to address using traditional biochemical assays: link protein binding to cell cycle behavior, correlate phosphorylation changes in one protein to the subcellular localization of another protein
Re-interrogate data - Re-analyze stored images whenever required to answer new questions as they arise during the course of research
Multiplexing assays - trabecular meshwork cells stained for DNA (blue), actin (red) and paxillin in foacl adhesions (green). Image courtesy of C. Laetherm, Aerie Pharmaceuticals

HCA features compared to other techniques

While understanding more about the working cell is a common goal for cell biologists, the individual techniques used in cellular research are very different from each other in terms of assay design and data output. The table illustrates some of the key differences between HCA and some traditional research techniques.

In addition to opening up new ways to address biological questions, advanced high content analysis systems, such as GE Healthcare's IN Cell Analyzer 2000,  provide a powerful alternative for applications that were previously addressed using more traditional methods. Read more about how HCA systems can complement and/or replace some of these older approaches to cell analysis:

•  Manual Microscopy - click here>>

•  Flow Cytometry - click here>>

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