Not exact matches
The red
cells are muscle
cells, the green areas are receptors for
neuronal input, and the blue patches are
cell nuclei.
The green staining indicates the cortical marker CTIP2, the red stain is the
neuronal marker TUJ1, and the blue stains the
nuclei of the
cells.
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.
These renderings show a tightly packed form of DNA called heterochromatin as it exists in a mouse
cell's
nucleus at different stages of
cell development: a multipotent stem
cell (left), a
neuronal progenitor (middle), and a mature nerve
cell (right).
Histologic findings show mature,
neuronal - like
cells with multiple processes, a Central
nucleus and a nucleolus.