Here cell nuclei are stained red and the cytoskeleton, made of the protein actin, is stained green.
Not exact matches
The
cells look like strands of translucent spaghetti, with bright dots —
nuclei, Schulze says — sprinkled
here and there.
Here, FGFR - TACC (shown in red) can be seen interacting with tubulin bundles (green), structures that support mitosis, at the point connecting the two daughter
cells (whose
nuclei are colored blue).
Here, the
nucleus is removed from a
cell.
This visualization shows tightly - packed DNA in a mouse
cell's
nucleus at different stages of development, seen
here in a semi-triangular form as a mature nerve
cell; in a roundish shape as a multipotent stem
cell; in a more oval form as a neuronal progenitor; and as a more fragmented structure that shows how removing a specialized binding protein (HP1β knockout) affects the structure of the DNA - packing material, called heterochromatin, in a mature neuron.
Here, we report that unphosphorylated STAT6 is present in the
nucleus and may facilitate constitutive COX - 2 expression in NSCLC
cells via binding to the COX - 2 promoter in association with p300.
Red blood
cells are recycled
here; platelets (a small colorless disk - shaped
cell fragment without a
nucleus, found in large numbers in blood and involved in clotting) and white blood
cells (less technical term for leukocyte which include lymphocytes, granulocytes, monocytes, and macrophages) are stored in the spleen.