“…On a positive note, with 1-10,000 cells it requires only extremely small cell numbers (Kelvey-Martin et al 1993). Up to now the comet assay has been successfully used, for example, to measure DNA damage and/or repair in leukocytes (Glei et al 2002b;Glei and Pool-Zobel 2006), buccal cells (Glei et al 2005), salivary gland tissue , primary colon cells (Glei et al 2006b), different cancer cell lines like HT29 (Munjal et al 2012), HT29 clone 19A (Glei et al 2002a(Glei et al , 2003, LT97 (Glei et al 2007), or HepG2 (Glei et al 2006a, and also different epithelial cells (Rojas et al 2014) like brain cells (Mohamed and Hussien 2016), sperm cells (Cortes-Gutierrez et al 2014), plant cells (Ventura et al 2013), yeast cells (Miloshev et al 2002), or Drosophila melanogaster (Gaivao and Sierra 2014). Meanwhile the comet assay has achieved a high degree of awareness.…”