High-parameter flow cytometry has opened the door to deeper biological insights — but with increased panel complexity comes longer acquisition times, higher risks of clogs, and more challenging sample prep. If you're pushing the limits of multicolor analysis, efficiency and data quality can often feel like a trade-off.
This webinar introduces a new approach to high-dimensional flow cytometry using acoustic focusing technology. Learn how the Invitrogen™ Attune™ Xenith™ Flow Cytometer enables rapid, reliable spectral data acquisition — even when working with clog-prone tissue samples and 30+ color panels.
Using a 37-color mouse panel for deep immunophenotyping of spleen and bone marrow, we’ll show how you can maintain data resolution and capture rare cell subsets at high throughput rates — without compromising sample integrity or spectral clarity.
Whether you're looking to reduce acquisition time, improve data quality, or scale up your experiments, this session is designed to show you how.
Register now and streamline your 30+ color panels in minutes
Thiago Alves da Costa, Ph.D. joined Thermo Fisher Scientific in 2022 as a Senior Scientist at the Fort Collins, Colorado site, working to generate relevant biological data using flow cytometry tools. He was born in São Paulo, Brazil. After completing his B.A. in Biology, Thiago continued his education as a graduate student at University of Campinas, Brazil where he obtained both a Master’s Degree and a Ph.D. in immunology, studying T cell development in the context of infectious diseases. In 2017, he started a postdoctoral position at the University of Colorado – Anschutz Medical Campus to study human B cell development using a humanized mouse model. Throughout his scientific career, he has been awarded fellowships from state and federal funding agencies, published 18 scientific papers and received honors and awards for his talks at the International Congress of Immunology and the American Association of Immunologists.
Jaime Green is a freelance science writer and author. Her work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Aeon, Popular Science, Slate, Astrobites, and elsewhere. She is the series editor of The Best American Science and Nature Writing and author of The Possibility of Life: Science, Imagination, and Our Quest for Kinship in the Cosmos.