1 avsnitt

The idea of light sheet microscopy was already born a hundred years ago. Richard Zsigmondy used an innovative method of side illumination to observe the chemistry of nanometer sized colloids, which won him the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1925. Almost a century later, Ernst Stelzer and his group re-implemented that technology within an era dominated by fluorescence microscopy. Fluorescent labeling of cells and the sensitivity of light sheet microscopy led to new insights into the three-dimensionality of whole organs and the four-dimensionality of developing organisms. The open source project “openSPIM” by the group of Pavel Tomancak finally made light sheet microscopy accessible to the broad scientific community. This has allowed Hartmann Harz at the Center for Advanced Light Microscopy at the LMU Munich to build an in-house light sheet microscope which PhD student Svenja Rühland from the group of Peter Nelson uses to image therapeutic vehicle cells within 3D tumor spheroids.

Light Sheet Sheds Light on Tumor Therapy Svenja Rühland / Hartmann Harz

    • Vetenskap

The idea of light sheet microscopy was already born a hundred years ago. Richard Zsigmondy used an innovative method of side illumination to observe the chemistry of nanometer sized colloids, which won him the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1925. Almost a century later, Ernst Stelzer and his group re-implemented that technology within an era dominated by fluorescence microscopy. Fluorescent labeling of cells and the sensitivity of light sheet microscopy led to new insights into the three-dimensionality of whole organs and the four-dimensionality of developing organisms. The open source project “openSPIM” by the group of Pavel Tomancak finally made light sheet microscopy accessible to the broad scientific community. This has allowed Hartmann Harz at the Center for Advanced Light Microscopy at the LMU Munich to build an in-house light sheet microscope which PhD student Svenja Rühland from the group of Peter Nelson uses to image therapeutic vehicle cells within 3D tumor spheroids.

    • video
    Light Sheet Sheds Light on Tumor Therapy (CC)

    Light Sheet Sheds Light on Tumor Therapy (CC)

    The idea of light sheet microscopy was already born a hundred years ago. Richard Zsigmondy used an innovative method of side illumination to observe the chemistry of nanometer sized colloids, which won him the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1925. Almost a century later, Ernst Stelzer and his group re-implemented that technology within an era dominated by fluorescence microscopy. Fluorescent labeling of cells and the sensitivity of light sheet microscopy led to new insights into the three-dimensionality of whole organs and the four-dimensionality of developing organisms.
    The open source project “openSPIM” by the group of Pavel Tomancak finally made light sheet microscopy accessible to the broad scientific community. This has allowed Hartmann Harz at the Center for Advanced Light Microscopy at the LMU Munich to build an in-house light sheet microscope which PhD student Svenja Rühland from the group of Peter Nelson uses to image therapeutic vehicle cells within 3D tumor spheroids.

    • 9 min

Mest populära poddar inom Vetenskap

Dumma Människor
Acast - Lina Thomsgård och Björn Hedensjö
I hjärnan på Louise Epstein
Sveriges Radio
Vetenskapsradion Historia
Sveriges Radio
A-kursen
Emma Frans och Clara Wallin
P3 Dystopia
Sveriges Radio
Språket
Sveriges Radio

Mer av Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

MCMP – Philosophy of Science
MCMP Team
MCMP – Epistemology
MCMP Team
Women Thinkers in Antiquity and the Middle Ages - SD
Peter Adamson
Theoretical Physics Schools (ASC)
The Arnold Sommerfeld Center for Theoretical Physics (ASC)
MCMP – Mathematical Philosophy (Archive 2011/12)
MCMP Team
Podcast Jüdische Geschichte
Abteilung für Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur, LMU München