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This page describes
some of the basic concepts underlying FlowJo; it is meant to help
you familiarize yourself with some of the terminology and the
features of FlowJo. As you navigate through the main documentation,
you will get more details about all of these topics. In addition,
you can follow links to some special topics regarding FlowJo:
The all-important Credits page, where
we have the opportunity to thank the many individuals who have spent
much time and effort helping us make FlowJo the most sophisticated
analysis package around, a "Frequently-Asked
Questions" page (FAQ), listing some common questions &
answers, a page about getting Help
from within FlowJo itself, and a page detailing the history of revisions
to FlowJo.
we will be adding platforms for special analysis
(DNA/Cell Cycle, Kinetics (Calcium flux), Proliferation, Calibration,
Statistical Comparison, and
Clustering) after the initial release.
What does FlowJo
do?
FlowJo should be the first step in the process of
analyzing flow cytometry data. FlowJo can analyze data generated
by any Flow Cytometer from any manufacturer. You may find
that FlowJo's sophisticated tools for generating output (graphical
or tabular) are sufficient for you to generate publication-quality
material.... but if not, FlowJo makes it easy for you to copy any
graphs, statistics, or other information into other programs for
further analysis and presentation.
Experiments and workspaces
FlowJo is a program designed to analyze flow cytometry
data. The basic concept behind this analysis is that of the "experiment."
An experiment is a collection of samples which have a set of common
attributes; for instance, there are sets of tubes stained
with the same antibodies, other sets of tubes which come from the
same tissue sources, etc. An experiment can be a single collection
of samples, or it can stretch across multiple runs over a period
of months.
With FlowJo, you will organize the samples in a
workspace.
A Workspace is similar to a notebook: it references every sample
that you are analyzing, and records the analyses (gates, statistics,
graphs, tables) that you have done. You can close the workspace,
and then reopen in the future and start where you left off. You
can have as many workspaces as you want; the organization is up
to you. We recommend that you have at least one workspace for every
experiment.
Within a workspace, you can group
samples by various attributes. For instance,
you can make a group of all samples derived from a single individual
(which may have different stains); you can also make groups of all
samples with the same stains (which come from different individuals).
Groups are really the powerful feature of FlowJo: when you perform
an operation on a group, it performs the operation on every sample
belonging to that group. Thus, you can apply a gate or a statistic
to a group, and that gate or analysis will be automatically performed
on all samples!
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Analyzing with FlowJo
You will find that your mode of operating FlowJo
will probably be very similar to the following series of steps:
- Load the samples into a workspace.
- Group samples into a variety of different groups
- Analyze a single ("prototype") sample
in detail. Decide on gates, statistics, etc.
- Apply the appropriate analyses to all the samples
in a group.
- Quickly check the samples in the group to make
sure the gates are acceptable: they may need minor modifications
to accommodate sample to sample variation.
- Generate a graphical
layout in which you can display particular
graphs from all samples.
- Generate a table
in which you can generate particular statistics from all samples.
You can then save this workspace as a template...
Next week, when you do another (similar) experiment, most of the
work is already done for you! You simply have to import the new
samples into the template workspace you created before: all
of the data files will be added to the appropriate groups, which
means all of your previous analyses (gates & statistics, etc.)
will be automatically applied to each sample. You need only regenerate
the graphical layouts and the tables.
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The Gating Hierarchy
Another fundamental concept in FlowJo is that of
the gating hierarchy.
When you first generate a gate on a sample (for instance, a lymphocyte
gate), FlowJo shows you this gate (subset) in the paradigm of a
genealogical tree. In other words, the "Lymphocyte" subset
is a "child" of the parent sample. It is shown in the
workspace indented a single level from the sample, underneath the
sample, to denote this. If you were to make another gate on the
sample (for instance, monocytes), then FlowJo creates another new
subset as another child of the sample; now, the lymphocyte and monocyte
subsets (or gates) are siblings.
Any operation that you can perform on a sample can
also be performed on a subset of the sample. Therefore, you can
view the lymphocyte subset and create gates (subsets) of this population.
If you create a T cell gate within lymphocytes, then the T cell
subset becomes a child of the lymphocytes (and, by extension, a
grandchild of the sample).
This paradigm is very important to the way in which
FlowJo operates. When you
copy analyses like gates, you can choose
to copy only the single gate that you click on, your you can choose
to copy it with all of its children (i.e., copy the entire analysis
tree). Remember, any subpopulation is a single gate. When you want
to recreate the same subpopulation on another sample, you need to
carry all of the gates (all of the ancestors of the subset) with
the subpopulation when you copy it.
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Batch operations
Batch operations (repetitive analyses performed
on multiple samples) are very simple in FlowJo. In general, batch
operations are performed on all samples in the current group (therefore,
you will want to create
sample groups that will serve to help
you generate batch outputs). Batch operations include copying gates
and analyses, generating graphical layouts, and generating tables.
In addition, there are some minor operations like opening a graph
of the same subset as you are viewing for all samples in the group,
unifying the analyses across samples within a group, deleting analyses,
and so forth.
In this way, FlowJo is a program that doesn't just
analyze individual data samples. Rather, the focus is on analyzing
groups of samples, experiments, or even multiple experiments at
once.
Compensation
In the world of increasing fluorescence parameters,
it has become impossible to fully compensate samples at the time
of collection. FlowJo provides an interface
for computing the compensation matrix
based on the collection of singly-stained samples. You can then
apply this compensation matrix to samples that are uncompensated.
At this point, you can view and analyze the compensated data.
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