This is the most commonly asked question. To answer it we need to know the following information:

  1. What is the approximate percentage of the population(s) you wish to sort?
  2. How many total cells do you want back?
  3. Do you want stringent purification or enrichment?
  4. How fragile or large are your cells?

All of these parameters influence the yield and purity of cell sorting. Here is an example: Let’s say the subset you want sorted is 20% of the total and you need 2 million cells for your experiment. In theory you would need to run 10 million cells through the sorter (10 million x 20% = 2 million). However, the actual yield is usually 75-95% of this theoretical yield, due to abort rates (caused by sort conflicts) and also the quality of your sample.

Therefore, we recommend that you bring 25-50% more cells to the sorter than you would need if the actual yield were 100% (based on the abundance of your target cells).