Sunday, July 03, 2005

The Art of Science


Worm Window
Erin Cram
Department of Molecular Biology (Princeton)

This work is based on the rose window of St. John the Divine, NYC. Each segment of the image is an image of the microscopic nematode, C. elegans. The red images were generated by staining the animals with a dye called rhodamine-phalloidin, which lights up actin, a protein found predominantly in muscles. The blue is a DNA stain called DAPI, and the green comes from expressing the jelly fish protein GFP transgenically in the nematodes. The grayscale images are mainly of C. elegans embryos or dissected C. elegans organs. Although the work was assembled using Photoshop, none of the image is pseudocolored.

1 Comments:

Blogger Karla said...

I was clicking around OKCupid, found your profile and to a lesser extent this blog. Nice articles! Thanks for helping me break up my boring day!

Everyone likes comments, even though I didn't say much!

10:06 AM  

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