Sentences with phrase «modern microscopy»

We use modern microscopy techniques to examine how chloroplasts and mitochondria interact with each other and other subcellular structures.
Scientists usually study them visually and using data; with modern microscopy it is possible to directly see the structure of some proteins.

Not exact matches

A pioneer of modern cell biology used cell fractionation and electron microscopy to describe subcellular structures.
Acquiring images using modern techniques such as light sheet fluorescence, confocal, or electron microscopy creates a significant data stream.
Scales are visible to the naked eye; more remarkable, electron microscopy reveals double - layered skin similar to that of modern animals, and possibly even the outlines of cells.
Researchers have access to state - of - the - art core facilities, including: genomics and next generation sequencing, bioinformatics, proteomics, advanced optical microscopy, FACS, high - throughput screening, tissue engineering and a modern animal house.
Stelzer concentrates his efforts on applications and further developments of advanced light microscopies in the modern life sciences, working on various aspects and applications of three - dimensional cell biology, lateral root development in Arabidopsis thaliana and the embryogenesis of, amongst other insects, Tribolium castaneum.
After thorough explanation of theoretical background, the microscopy techniques used in a modern biomedical laboratory will be demonstrated.
In this course, trainees will perform experiments involving both classical physiological models, as well as modern reductionist approaches and confocal microscopy to follow trafficking of transporter proteins in cultured cells.
Modern light sheet fluorescence microscopy was first pioneered by Voie and colleagues and originally named orthogonal - plane fluorescence optical sectioning (OPFOS)(2).
Overcoming the limitations of confocal fluorescence microscopy, we invented and developed light sheet - based fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) establishing it as a major tool in the modern life sciences.
Although the modern explosion in light microscopy techniques has provided biologists with a host of tools and opened doors to many great insights, it can be overwhelming to a novice microscopist.
Due to its unrivaled contrast, fluorescence imaging has emerged as the dominant light microscopy contrast technique in modern biology (1).
The five - day theoretical course with demonstrations and practical exercises, is intensively devoted to modern methodologies of light and electron microscopy.
Recent progress in phylogenomics, and the implementation of modern molecular, microscopy, and cell biology techniques in a handful of spiralian model systems have made that possible.
Specific Clinical / Research Interest: Experimental neuropathology, neurodegenerative disorders, brain aging; Functional anatomy of the cerebral cortex, comparative neuroanatomy; Computer - assisted morphometry, stereology, microscopy; Magnetic resonance microscopy, functional brain imaging Current Students: Tuyen Nguyen (PhD) Postdoctoral Fellows: Camilla Butti, PhD, Timothy Rumbell PhD, Merina Varghese PhD Research Personnel: Bridget Wicinski, Daniel Dickstein Summary of Research Studies: Our research is directed towards the study of selective neuronal vulnerability in dementing illnesses using classical neuropathological as well as modern quantitative immunohistochemical methods.
The initial aim of the pathology investigation was to carefully examine the spinal cord using immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy, as well as classical techniques, to confirm the pathology previously reported and to look for new clues to the pathogenesis and aetiology using the more modern techniques.
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