Alternate header for print version
Contributors
Help
Submit
menu
Background
Discovery
Analysis
Collected Data
Derived Data
About us
Center for Research in Biological Systems
Basic Science Building, Room 1000
University of California, San Diego
9500 Gilman Drive
La Jolla, CA 92093-0608, USA
Voice
: (858) 534-0276
Fax
: (858) 534-7497
Email
: wawong@ucsd.edu
Search Results for
Dronpa
(5 results)
CIL:38599
NCBI Organism Classification
Homo sapiens
Biological Process
focal adhesion assembly
Cellular Component
focal adhesion
This total internal reflection (TIRF) image of both the Dronpa-alphaa ctinin and the unconverted tdEos-vinculin channels corresponds to the same image field as the diffraction limited DIC image CIL 38...
CIL:38651
NCBI Organism Classification
Homo sapiens
Biological Process
molecular organization
Cellular Component
focal adhesion
This photoactivation localization microscopy (PALM) image of tdEos-vinculin (red) and Dronpa-paxillin (green) illustrates that vinculin and paxillin are segregated into interlocking microdomains withi...
CIL:38598
NCBI Organism Classification
Homo sapiens
Biological Process
molecular organization of focal adhesion components
Cellular Component
focal adhesion
Photoactivation localization microscopy image (PALM) of a human foreskin fibroblast expressing Dronpa-alpha-actinin (red) and tdEos-vinculin (green). This image reveals that although conventional dif...
CIL:38652
NCBI Organism Classification
Homo sapiens
Biological Process
molecular organization
Cellular Component
focal adhesion
This image combines total internal reflection microscopy (TIRF) of mCerulean-actin (blue) with photoactivation localization microscopy (PALM) image of tdEos-vinculin (red) and Dronpa-paxillin (green)....
CIL:38600
NCBI Organism Classification
Homo sapiens
Biological Process
molecular organization
Cellular Component
focal adhesion
Photoactivation localization microscopy image (PALM) of a human foreskin fibroblast expressing Dronpa-actin (green) and tdEos-paxillin (red). Paxillin assembles in fibrillar-like adhesions that run p...