Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2170407 | Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Novel technologies are required for three-dimensional cell biology and biophysics. By three-dimensional we refer to experimental conditions that essentially try to avoid hard and flat surfaces and favour unconstrained sample dynamics. We believe that light-sheet-based microscopes are particularly well suited to studies of sensitive three-dimensional biological systems. The application of such instruments can be illustrated with examples from the biophysics of microtubule dynamics and three-dimensional cell cultures. Our experience leads us to suggest that three-dimensional approaches reveal new aspects of a system and enable experiments to be performed in a more physiological and hence clinically more relevant context.
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Authors
Philipp J Keller, Francesco Pampaloni, Ernst HK Stelzer,