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Kevin's Yamaha WR 400....ready to tear up the fire roads in the national forests in northern California
iPS cells reprogrammed from a woman's skin. Blue shows nuclei. Green and red indicate proteins found in reprogrammed cells but not in skin cells (TRA1-62 and NANOG). These cells can be matured into cells of the body, and used for studying models of disease.
The image was taken in the laboratory of Kathrin Plath at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Learn more about CIRM-funded stem cell research: www.cirm.ca.gov.
The staircases in each building group are enclosed by a giant object that represents the decade. In the 90s buildings, it's a giant cell phone.
This is the view down cell block seven at the Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. I encourage everyone to take the tour if you have time while you're visiting Philadelphia. A really amazing building with an amazing history that not too many people know about.
According to the Penitentiary website: In May 1833, architect John Haviland created a new model for Cell Block Seven, one with several advantages over earlier cell blocks at the site. The most noticeable difference between Cell Block Seven and the previous two story cell blocks – Four, Five & Six – is the 30 foot barrel vault ceiling. In addition, Haviland set the catwalks back so they did not hang over the first floor. This made the block brighter and contributed to the Cathedral - like atmosphere. When Cell Block Seven was finished in 1836, it marked the completion of the original construction.
For September's Monthly Scavenger Hunt.
Both cell and phone found in Alcatraz. It was pinker than I imagined in there.
A weekend spent in French Prison was not what we had planned!
More craziness at www.facebook.com/urbanexploring
Cell #7 by Sybilla Poortman & Meffi
Cell #7 lends a hand!
Thanks Sibi & Meffi! All the best to you...
Cancer is unchecked cell growth. Mutations in genes can cause cancer by accelerating cell division rates or inhibiting normal controls on the system, such as cell cycle arrest or programmed cell death. As a mass of cancerous cells grows, it can develop into a tumor.
Natural Killer Cell
Natural killer cell function, relationship to disease, and location in the human body.
Credit: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
Two shot vertorama with the TS-E. Had to crop out a lot because I was low to the ground and was unable to level my tripod. I need to get one of those hotshoe bubble levels!
Today I was given access to the cells in Richmond Castle. Originally built in the 19thC to house prisoners, they were most famously (infamously)? used to house Conscientious Objectors during WWI (1914-1918). The cells are not very big, probably about 10' long by 7' wide. There's no heating and the prisoners were guarded by serving military that probably had no sympathy whatsoever for the inmates. The inmates, along with their guards and other users of the building left their mark through graffiti. Somebody has actually counted and there are 2,300 examples of graffiti dating back to the mid 19thC. The cells are not open to the public, so I feel privileged to have been given access and allowed to take pictures. I hope to visit again soon.
The ability of cancer cells to move and spread depends on actin-rich core structures such as the podosomes (yellow) shown here in melanoma cells. Cell nuclei (blue), actin (red), and an actin regulator (green) are also shown.
This image was originally submitted as part of the 2015 NCI Cancer Close Up project and selected for exhibit.
See also visualsonline.cancer.gov/closeup
Credit: Julio C. Valencia, NCI Center for Cancer Research
See more from my hometown: Celle Maybe more doors and windows could be interesting, and... you are welcome to visit my profile You should have a look on my Faves too.
Hyperoxidation and oligomerization of PrxII (green) halts cell cycle progression when H2O2 levels are high. (JCB 175(5) TOC1)
This image is available to the public to copy, distribute, or display under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Reference: Phalen et al. (2006) J. Cell Biol. 175:779-789.
Published on: December 4, 2006.
Doi: 10.1083/jcb.200606005.
Read the full article at: