Stunning images captured through light microscopes

Tuesday, 01 December, 2009


A movie called ‘Sexual Attraction in Spyrogyra’, by Dr Jeremy Pickett-Heaps of the University of Melbourne, has won third place in the 2009 Olympus BioScapes Digital Imaging Competition. The movie depicts reproduction in simple algae captured in time-lapse video over two hours.

Now in its sixth year, the Olympus BioScapes competition is the world’s premier platform for honouring images and movies of human, plant and animal subjects as captured through light microscopes. Any life science subject is eligible, and entries are judged based on the science they depict, their aesthetics (beauty and impact of the image) and their technical merit. This year, in addition to Prizes 1-10, 65 other images and movies were recognised with Honourable Mentions.

The images are all stunningly beautiful and can be viewed online at www.olympusbioscapes.com.

First place went to a glowing, eerily beautiful image of a water flea with its radiant green ‘crown of thorns’ by Dr Jan Michels, a zoologist at the Christian Albrecht University of Kiel, Germany. The image reveals not only the exoskeleton, but also interior detail down to the nuclei within its cells, seen as tiny, glowing blue dots. This stunning and unusual depiction of a whole organism detailing both external and intracellular structures was selected from more than 2000 images and movies - a competition record - to earn First Prize, $5000 worth of Olympus equipment.

Second prize in the competition was awarded to Chung-Ju Rachel Wang of the University of California, Berkeley. Her image of the nucleus of a corn plant cell shows a ladder-like protein structure called the synaptonemal complex, which forms between chromosomes during one type of cell division. According to Wang, this may be among the first high-resolution 3D images of this complex ever captured with a light microscope. The two parallel axes look like tangled, colourful threads as they twist around each other.


Other winning and honourable mention images reflect a never-ending fascination with the influence of science in everyday life, including surprising views of fossils, jellyfish, spiders, flowers, mosquitoes and dinosaur bones.

Albert Pan of Harvard University captured Seventh Prize with an image that uses the recently developed ‘Brainbow’ imaging technique, one of the most advanced fluorescence imaging methodologies available today. In his image of long, slender nerve fibres covering a larval zebrafish tail, each cell glows a distinct, random colour, allowing researchers to differentiate neighbouring cells and follow their often-tangled paths.

Tenth prize went to an important research image of motor neurons in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease), captured by Gist Croft and Mackenzie Weygandt, of New York’s Columbia University and Project ALS. The stem cells used to generate the motor neurons in the image were induced Pluripotent Stem (iPS) cells made from the skin cells of an 83-year-old ALS patient. Studying these ALS motor neurons may allow scientists to better understand and combat the disease.

 

“These images and movies reflect some of the most exciting research being done around the world and reveal the art that exists in optical microscopy,” said Osamu Joji, Group Vice President and General Manager, Scientific Equipment Group, Olympus America Inc. “They shed light on the intricacy of our living universe and provide us with a visual record of the science of our era. But just as important, they reflect the awesome grace, beauty and mystery of aspects of the natural world that can’t be seen with the naked eye. There are extraordinary stories being told in science laboratories today, and the BioScapes Competition, with entries representing 62 countries and winners from five continents, allows Olympus to share those images and stories with the world.” Twenty of the 2009 winning and Honourable Mention images will be displayed at the San Diego Natural History Museum from mid-December to February 2010. The 2009 winners’ tour will continue to venues in New York City, suburban Washington DC, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and other cities. Additional exhibits of winning BioScapes images will simultaneously be touring in cities across the US and Canada throughout 2009-10.

Olympus selects outstanding authorities in microscope imaging as judges for the competition, which is open to users of any brand of light microscope equipment.

This year’s BioScapes panel of judges included four individuals renowned for their knowledge of microscope-based imaging. They are Thomas Deerinck, National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research, University of California, San Diego; Kenneth N Fish, PhD, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Douglas Murphy, PhD, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Janelia Farm Research Campus, Virginia; and Julie Theriot, PhD, Stanford University School of Medicine, California.

In addition to Jan Michels (1st), Chung-Ju Rachel Wang (2nd), Jeremy Pickett-Heaps (3rd), Albert Pan (7th) and Gist Croft and Mackenzie Weygandt (10th), the other Top 10 winners include: Charles Krebs of Issaquah, Washington, for his image of Haematococcus pluvialis (4th prize); David Domozych of Skidmore University, New York, for a photo of the unicellular alga Penium (5th prize); Alvaro Migotto of the University of São Paulo, Brazil, for his depiction of a Portuguese Man o’ War tentacle (6th prize); Heiti Paves, Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia for his Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress) flower (8th prize); and Haruka Fujimaki of Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts, for her image of Atlantic salmon embryos (9th prize).

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