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Showing Original Post only (View all)Photo: 'OMG' Microscope Lives Up to Its Name [View all]

The scientists at the IU School of Medicine-Bloomington nicknamed their new microscope the OMG for good reasonthe images it produces are showstoppers. The DeltaVision OMX imaging system (its official title) is a $1.2 million dollar microscope that can peek inside a cell and image fluorescent proteins in unprecedented detail.
Jane Stout, a researcher in the NIH-funded lab, used the OMG to create this spectacular image that won her first place in the high- and super-resolution microscopy category of the 2012 GE Healthcare Life Sciences Cell Imaging Competition.
What youre looking at is a cell in the midst of dividing into two identical copiesa process called mitosis. Here, the chromosomes (in blue) are aligned at the cells equator. Microtubules (red) from opposite poles of the cell attach to the chromosomes using the kinetochores (green) and pull them to opposite ends of the cell, which then splits in half. But sometimes cells do not divide properlya common problem in cancer. Understanding the mechanics of cell division could help us correct this process when it goes wrong.
Jane Stouts prize: her mitosis image will light up a billboard in Times Square in New York City in April. That is a wonderful celebration of science!
http://www.govexec.com/excellence/promising-practices/2013/03/photo-omg-microscope-lives-its-name/62021/?oref=eig-homepage-module
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Cancer halted in five patients after treatment with own genetically modified cells
The Straight Story
Mar 2013
#11
I hope the patenting of genes does not allow big Pharma to take control of this for big money.
DhhD
Mar 2013
#34
Apparently, with shrinking budgets we can only afford to look at tiny things now. n/t
eggplant
Mar 2013
#35
I'm going to have to show this to my daughter. She loves stuff like this. So do I.
liberal_at_heart
Mar 2013
#55