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Filming Early Animal Development

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HEIDELBERG, Germany, July 12, 2010 — The transformation of a single cell into a complete animal is amazing and complicated. Cells must divide and migrate through the ever-changing embryo, shaping themselves into specialized organs. And it happens at a blistering pace: A zebra fish embryo, for example, goes from a single cell to 20,000 within the first 24 hours of life, as its basic body axis forms. Scientists are now able to marvel at this process in developing fish and flies with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. A new imaging method, which combines two established microscopy techniques, allows researchers to...Read full article

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    Published: July 2010
    animal developmentBiophotonicscell biologyDigital Fly Embryodigital scanned laser light sheet fluorescence microscopyDigital Zebrafish EmbryoDSLMEMBLembryo developmentErnst StelzerEuropeEuropean Molecular Biology LaboratoryGermanyHHMIHoward Hughes Medical InstituteImagingMicroscopyNature MethodsOpticsPhilipp KellerResearch & TechnologySensors & DetectorsSloan Kettering Cancer InstituteTony WilsonUniversity of HeidelbergUniversity of Oxfordzebra fish

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