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Your search for “fluorescence” returned 168 results

Golgi Trafficking Controlled by G-Proteins

April 9, 2015

A family of proteins called G proteins are a recognized component of the communication system the human body uses to sense hormones and other chemicals in the bloodstream and to send messages to cells. In work that further illuminates how cells work, researchers at University of California, San Diego School…

The Media is the Message: How Stem Cells Grow Depends On What They Grow Up In

May 5, 2015

Human pluripotent stem cells possess the ability to grow into almost any kind of cell, which has made them dynamic tools for studying early human development and disease, but much depends upon what they grow up in. Writing in the May 4 online issue of the journal Scientific Reports, researchers…

Protein’s Impact on Colorectal Cancer is Dappled

June 30, 2015

Researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have discovered a cell signaling pathway that appears to exert some control over initiation and progression of colorectal cancer, the third leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. A key protein in the pathway also appears to be…

These Microscopic Fish are 3D-Printed to do More Than Swim

August 25, 2015

Nanoengineers at the University of California, San Diego used an innovative 3D printing technology they developed to manufacture multipurpose fish-shaped microrobots — called microfish — that are efficient swimmers, are chemically powered and magnetically controlled. These proof-of-concept synthetic microfish will inspire a new generation of “smart” microrobots that have diverse…

Chemists Devise a New, Versatile Way to Tag RNA

September 23, 2015

Chemists have devised a versatile way to attach handles and tags to RNA so that the tiny molecules can be detected and traced within cells or selectively pulled from a complex mixture of molecules.

UC San Diego Biophysicists Discover How Hydra Opens Its Mouth

March 8, 2016

A team of biologists and physicists at UC San Diego has uncovered in detail the dynamic process that allows the multi-tentacle Hydra, a tiny freshwater animal distantly related to the sea anemone, to open and close its mouth.

Advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging Technology to Track Cells in the Body

March 14, 2016

The need to non-invasively see and track cells in living persons is indisputable. Emerging treatments using stem cells and immune cells are poised to most benefit from cell tracking, which would visualize their behavior in the body after delivery. Clinicians require such data to speed these cell treatments to patients.…

For First Time, Scientists Use CRISPR-Cas9 to Target RNA in Live Cells

March 17, 2016

Scientists have long sought an efficient method for targeting RNA— intermediary genetic material that carries the genetic code from the cell’s nucleus to protein-making machinery — in living cells. Researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have now achieved this by applying the popular DNA-editing technique CRISPR-Cas9…

First Peek Into the Brain of a Freely Walking Fruit Fly

May 16, 2016

Researchers at the Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind at UC San Diego have developed a technique for imaging brain activity in a freely walking fruit fly. Working with one of the most common model organisms in science, the team shows for the first time what goes on in the…

UC San Diego Students Design Low-Cost HIV Viral Load Monitoring System for Tijuana, Mexico

July 7, 2016

If not included, the first paragraph from release will be used): Two teams from UC San Diego’s Engineering World Health (EWH) student organization and Global TIES program are combining forces this summer to bring a device they created to monitor viral load in HIV patients to a clinical setting in…

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