Two heads are better than one, as the saying goes, and sometimes two instruments, ingeniously recombined, can accomplish feats that neither could have done on its own.
A hybrid microscope allows scientists to simultaneously image the full 3D orientation and position of an ensemble of molecules, such as labeled proteins inside cells. The microscope combines polarized ...
In the mid-1670s, Johannes Swammerdam, a Dutch biologist, peered through his microscope at a honeybee's brain and drew what ...
Bacteria get up to all sorts of strange things. As a result, they’ve evolved to produce an extensive range of small molecules ...
Scientists have found that an increase in water salinity in the cells of the marine diatom Nitzschia weakens the connections ...
Scientists have developed Rhobo6, a light microscopy probe that reveals extracellular matrix structures in live tissues, ...
A hybrid microscope, born at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), for the first time allows scientists to simultaneously ...
In their effort to answer a decades-old biological question about how the hepatitis B virus (HBV) is able to establish ...
This valuable work presents how PRDM16 plays a critical role during colloid plexus development, through regulating BMP signaling. Solid evidence supports the context-dependent gene regulatory ...
Researchers propose that CNDP2-mediated cooperation can be an effective and specific target for cancer treatment.
Cancer cells work together to source nutrients from their environment-a cooperative process that was previously overlooked by scientists but may be a promising target for treating cancer.
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