Dr Barry Moran is head of flow cytometry in the Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute (TBSI), in Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. He attained an MSc from the University of Glasgow (Medical Genetics) and a PhD from Trinity College Dublin (Immunology). He began to develop his cytometry expertise in the Scripps Research Institute and UCSD in San Diego before returning to Ireland to take up his current post in 2005. He is heavily involved with the flow community in Ireland and internationally, directing the Cytometry Society of Ireland and sitting on the flow cytometry committee of the Royal Microscopical Society. The state-of-the-art Flow Cytometry Facility in TBSI is the best-equipped cytometry suite in Ireland, with three high-end platforms (FACSAria Fusion cell sorter, ImageStream X Mark II imaging cytometer & Cytek Aurora full-spectrum analyser) and 4 flow cytometer analysers. Serving over 100 research groups, the facility has ~200 regular users. As manager of a busy cytometry facility, Barry has extensive expertise in most cytometry applications, with particular proficiency in designing and applying high-parameter cytometry panels to elucidate immune cell function, particularly in the area of autoimmunity.

Articles by Barry Moran

Being “Accuri-te” Through Cytometry: A Guide to Accuri C6 Software

A new lab toy to make it big in the last 5–10 years is the Accuri C6 cytometer (now under the BD umbrella), a low-cost instrument in comparison to the big boys. Lightweight, with a small footprint and straightforward maintenance, it’s often the cytometer of choice. It may be suitable for those labs that require…

Immunophenotyping: Identifying Who’s Who in the Cellular World

Immunophenotyping: Identifying Who’s Who in the Cellular World

Figuring out what’s what When studying cells and cell subsets (and cell sub-subsets, and so on!!) we need ways to identify and classify every single cell. This will allow us to individually analyse each population and, for example, help to discover their role in health and disease. A principal way we do this is by looking…

Intracellular Cytokine Staining: Letting It All Build Up Inside

Intracellular Cytokine Staining: Letting It All Build Up Inside

Cytokines, those small proteins that modulate immune cell responses, once translated are normally secreted rapidly out of the cell. So, previously we could only check the levels of cytokines secreted in the supernatant, but we wouldn’t know which cell was producing which cytokine. But what if we had a way to keep the cytokines inside the cell?  Then we…