News
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  Press Release
 

Feb 2000

 

LIFE Magazine Features Cell Image Captured On Applied Precision's DeltaVision

The February 2000 issue of LIFE features a photograph of the HIV virus in a human skin cell, captured and processed by scientists at the Salk Institute using Applied Precision's DeltaVision� restoration microscopy system.

Scientists at the Salk Institute have developed a method for tagging the HIV virus with a protein so that the virus is visible through a DeltaVision restoration microscopy system. Using a green protein from a glow-in-the-dark jellyfish, the researchers can make the virus show up in contrast to the cell. Thanks to the 3D capabilities of the DeltaVision, scientists can visualize how the virus gets to a cell's nucleus. Researchers hope that understanding how the virus travels will help them figure out how to stop the virus from getting to the nucleus, thereby preventing it from reproducing and infecting other cells.

LIFE, the country's premier photojournalism medium, reaches 1.5 million subscribers monthly and has been one of America's most-respected news publications since its inception in 1936. Visit LIFE online at http://www.pathfinder.com/Life.



 
     
  DeltaVision® is a family of fully integrated, optimized microscopy systems designed to look at multiple probes and samples over longer periods of time than other imaging systems. These systems are uniquely suited for 3D and 2D live cell applications. As biological questions increase in complexity and sensitivity, there is a greater need for higher image quality. Improved resolution and contrast yield greater quantitative measurements and therefore more reliable results.
    © 2010 Applied Precision, Inc.