Frontiers in Genetics (Oct 2014)

High throughput sample processing and automated scoring

  • Gunnar eBrunborg,
  • Petra eJackson,
  • Sergey eShaposhnikov,
  • Sergey eShaposhnikov,
  • Hildegunn eDahl,
  • Amaya eAzqueta,
  • Andrew Richard Collins,
  • Kristine Bjerve Gutzkow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2014.00373
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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The comet assay is a sensitive and versatile method for assessing DNA damage in cells. In the traditional version of the assay, there are many manual steps involved and few samples can be treated in one experiment. High throughput modifications have been developed during recent years, and they are reviewed and discussed. These modifications include accelerated scoring of comets; other important elements that have been studied and adapted to high throughput are cultivation and manipulation of cells or tissues before and after exposure, and freezing of treated samples until comet analysis and scoring. High throughput methods save time and money but they are useful also for other reasons: large-scale experiments may be performed which are otherwise not practicable (e.g., analysis of many organs from exposed animals, and human biomonitoring studies), and automation gives more uniform sample treatment and less dependence on operator performance. The high throughput modifications now available vary largely in their versatility, capacity, complexity and costs. The bottleneck for further increase of throughput appears to be the scoring.

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