Go under the microscope to see these brilliant works of art.
Microscopic images of pollen. The crushed-looking grains are mutants that lack proteins in their structural mesh, called a nuclear lamina.
Junsik Choi, David Mankus, Margaret Bisher, Abigail Lytton-Jean, Mary Gehring; Whitehead Institute & Koch InstituteUsing microscopes to observe living things has been one of the most powerful ways to understand how biology works, at least since Dutch naturalist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek first zoomed in on bacteria in the 1600s. Today, high-magnification images can help design new medical tools, enrich our understanding of diseases, and explain how embryos develop.
Linzixuan Zhang, Jooli Han, Laboni Santra, Xinyan Pan, Robert Langer, Ana Jaklenec; Koch Institute at MITfruit fly embryo. On the left, nuclei in gray are linked by new cell junctures, marked in orange. On the right, cell boundaries are mapped with randomly assigned colors to track them as they evolve. At center, a newly-formed structure fold pulls the two sides inward.A 35-micron slice of a “core shell” microparticle that was implanted under the skin of a mouse for one week.
Malaysia Latest News, Malaysia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Pokémon TCG Value Watch: Vivid Voltage In March 2023This month's PokemonTCG Value Watch observes the Pikachu VMAX Rainbow Rare bounce back from last month's low to its highest value in a year. Pokemon
Read more »
Esther Phillips, Josh White & More Inducted into Blues Hall of Fame: Full List of 2023 InducteesR&B and blues singer Esther Phillips is among the 2023 inductees into The Blues Foundation’s Blues Hall of Fame.
Read more »
Brandon Miller, Alabama among best March Madness 2023 betsBrandon Miller and the Alabama Crimson Tide are going to be the story of March Madness.
Read more »
2023 World Video Game Hall of Fame finalists announcedWizardry, warfare and Wii are on the ballot as the World Video Game Hall of Fame narrows down its contenders for the class of 2023.
Read more »