CURATED BY
Kathryn Faith
WHEN
March 14 - March 14
WHERE
View Gallery
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16
The awareness that what we eat influences our well-being predates modern science, yet we are still discovering new connections between diet and health. This image shows mouse lung tissue; the normal cells near the bottom, sampled from a healthy mouse, contrast with the cancerous cells at the top, sampled from a mouse whose diet included oil previously heated to deep-frying temperatures. Research efforts like this one help to clarify the hidden health risks and benefits of different foods.
Biologists can never observe first-hand the evolutionary history of Earth’s diverse lifeforms. Instead, they play detective, examining the clues past processes have left behind to trace progressive changes in form and function. In this cross-section of an opossum skull, researchers can identify the similarity between the bone structure of the reptilian jaw and a developmental stage of mammalian middle ear bones. By studying middle ear development in mammals, we can better understand how the same bones used for chewing in a common ancestor became adapted for hearing in opossums and people.
The contrasting geometric shapes in this image were formed by the boundaries between a drop of sea surface seawater from the North Sea combined with a drop of oil from deep beneath the sea floor in the North Sea. Researchers constructed an experimental test bed called the GeoBioCell to study the interactions between water, rock, microbes, and oil under high magnification. Researchers hope to develop a method to prevent oil “souring,” the contamination of oil fields by microbially-produced sulfide gas.
Methanosarcina is a genus of bacteria named for the shapes produced by clusters of individual cells, such as those seen in this image. These clusters resemble sarcina, the traveling packs carried by Roman soldiers; they can also resemble billowing clouds, a reminder of the contribution of these bacteria to climate change. Microbes such as these produce approximately 2 billion tons of methane each year as they decompose organic waste. Knowledge of their natural history can help us improve biofuel production while also mitigating the human contribution to climate change.
In this image, a few dark points stand out against a softer, textured background. These points represent individual copies of a single gene within human cancer cells. The researchers who created this image developed a new method that allows them to track, in 3D, the location of individual genes within cells. This tool will allow researchers to visualize fundamental biological processes and reveal how these processes are disrupted in diseases such as cancer.
The circular, branching patterns seen here are a common way to represent the evolutionary relationships between different organisms. In this research, scientists examined the relationships among species of Eukarya, the branch of life that includes animals, plants, and fungi, and Archaea, a branch of life that comprises single-celled microbes that often live in extreme environments. By comparing the DNA sequences of key genes in modern organisms, we can trace the evolution of the earliest forms of life billions of years ago.
Moirai
Scientist Collaborator
Anthony Cam
William Helferich Laboratory
Instrument
NanoZoomer Slide Scanner
Funding Agency
Funded by the NIH and the USDA
Original Imaging
Special Thanks
Image Rights
Images not for public use without permission from the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology.
Marching On
Scientist Collaborator
Thomas Mand and Mary Beth Metcalf
Bill Metcalf Laboratory
Instrument
Olympus BX60 Microscope/Olympus DP72 Camera
Funding Agency
Funded by DOE
Original Imaging
Special Thanks
The Measure of Every Part
Scientist Collaborator
Ipek Tasan
Huimin Zhao Laboratory
Instrument
Zeiss Elyra S1 Super Resolution Structured Illumination Microscope
Funding Agency
Funded by NIH
Original Imaging
Special Thanks
Life’s Vintage
Scientist Collaborator
Celia Mendez and Carla Baptista
Isaac Cann Laboratory
Instrument
Analytical software
Funding Agency
Funded by NASA
Original Imaging
Special Thanks
Champaign businessman Doug Nelson, President of BodyWork Associates, first proposed the idea that became Art of Science, and his continued efforts to support the exhibit made its realization possible. The IGB is also grateful to James Barham of Barham Benefit Group and [co][lab] founder Matt Cho for hosting the annual exhibit.