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Science, photography, wine and the wilds..Archive for November, 2007
Science, wow!
I’m catching up on the science podcasts that I’ve missed over the past couple of weeks, and had the pleasure of listening to Eric Clapton’s Layla being played on a carbon nano-tube. I had the overwhelming feeling of that ‘where were you when you heard that JFK was shot’ scenario from the generation past. Science never ceases to amazing me. Every damn day. Nanotube Radio
Brainbow mice
Just heard an amazing piece on NPR’s Science Friday regarding ‘brainbow’ mice.These mice have different ratios of green, red, and cyan fluorescent protein expression in each cell, which when visualised using confocal microscopy, shows a ‘brainbow’ of fluorescent expression. These beautifully detailed images allow the resolution in individual dendritic processes amidst their neighbors due to varied expression of the fluorescent proteins. The authors abstract in their Nature paper:Detailed analysis of neuronal network architecture requires the development of new methods. Here we present strategies to visualize synaptic circuits by genetically labelling neurons with multiple, distinct colours. In Brainbow transgenes, Cre/lox recombination is used to create a stochastic choice of expression between three or more fluorescent proteins (XFPs). Integration of tandem Brainbow copies in transgenic mice yielded combinatorial XFP expression, and thus many colours, thereby providing a way to distinguish adjacent neurons and visualize other cellular interactions. As a demonstration, we reconstructed hundreds of neighbouring axons and multiple synaptic contacts in one small volume of a cerebellar lobe exhibiting approximately 90 colours. The expression in some lines also allowed us to map glial territories and follow glial cells and neurons over time in vivo. The ability of the Brainbow system to label uniquely many individual cells within a population may facilitate the analysis of neuronal circuitry on a large scale.” The images are truely amazing!http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v450/n7166/abs/nature06293.html Microscope renaissance – The Boston Globe