Webinar details
- How to monitor the level of exosomes in urine samples and cell cultures
- Review of how exosomes can potentially be used in clinical settings
- The power and promise of using magnetic beads to automate the isolation of exosomes
The webinar will be followed by a live Q&A session. Meet the speakers:
Alexander “Sasha” Vlassov PhD (Sr. Staff Scientist, Molecular Biology)
Axl Neurauter PhD (Sr. Manager R&D, Cell Biology)
Ketil Winther Pedersen PhD (Staff Scientist, Cell Biology)

Alexander “Sasha” Vlassov PhD (Sr. Staff Scientist, Molecular Biology)
Axl Neurauter PhD (Sr. Manager R&D, Cell Biology)
Ketil Winther Pedersen PhD (Staff Scientist, Cell Biology)
About exosomes
Exosomes are attractive for biomarker research for several reasons:
- Their cargo is protected against nucleases and proteinases present in body fluids
- Only live cells produce exosomes
- Surface markers can reflect their origin (e.g., tumor-derived)
While ultracentrifugation allow for the isolation of exosomes, this method cannot discriminate efficiently between subpopulations or other microvesicles.
Join us on Thursday, May 21, 2015: |
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Session 1: | 2:00 PM CET | 1:00 PM GMT (Europe friendly) | |
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Session 2: | 2:00 PM ET | 11:00 AM PT (North America friendly) |