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Izzy Jayasinghe Harnesses Cutting-Edge Microscopy to Image Cells

ABOVE: © STUART ROBINSON Asked what initially drew her to science, Izzy Jayasinghe has a modest answer. “I wasn’t very good at very many other things in school,” she says. “And I had, I guess, a general curiosity.” While in high school in New Zealand, Jayasinghe built a viscoelastic damper, a type of shock absorber used in cars and in buildings in earthquake-prone areas, and tested how various design parameters affected its performance.  The project won an award at a science fair for the city of Auckland, with a prize of a small scholarship to the University of Auckland, where she studied biomedicine beginning in 2003. During her senior year, Jayasinghe worked in the lab of biophysicist Christian Soeller, using a confocal microscope to examine the positions of proteins known as sodium-calcium exchangers in heart cells. Previous research had produced conflicting results on whether these exchangers colocalized with another type of protein known as ryanodine receptors. By

Scientists Observe DNA Dancing for the First Time Ever

0 comments A team of researchers in the U.K. has announced the creation of a new dance video. And no, it’s not another enthralling TikTok clip. It is, in fact, a simulation of how a DNA loop “dances” as a stressing force is applied to it. And the dance is not only rhythmic, but also a potential way to gain key insights into how DNA interacts with other molecules. Gizmodoreported on the observation, which stands as the first time researchers have seen DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid, a molecule consisting of two polynucleotide chains that coil around each other to form a double helix dance under pressure. (Yes, you should say that like David Bowie in your head.)

Visualisation of dancing DNA

Intriguing new twist to unfolding story of DNA

Date Time Intriguing new twist to unfolding story of DNA Scientists have developed ground-breaking techniques for visualising the stresses and strains placed on tiny twisted DNA circles. Using advanced atomic force microscope technology and a supercomputer, the research team from the Universities of Leeds, Sheffield, York and the John Innes Centre revealed that twisted DNA can develop kinks and creases that help to package it into compact shapes. Getting a DNA molecule into a cell involves a process of folding called supercoiling, where the DNA is twisted and looped. The researchers believe their technique for visualising how DNA can compact so tightly will accelerate the development of new forms of gene therapy where diseases can be prevented or cured by because these very small circles of DNA can squeeze into cells more easily.

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