Tissues

An illegible microscopy image with overlapping fluorescent labels of seven proteins (left) was translated with great precision using CombPlex into an image that allows the different proteins to be distinguished (right)

All embroidery colors

AI-based technology developed in Dr. Liat Keren's lab enables an unprecedented view of processes in body tissues
Mouse, rabbit and human embryos (right to left) in the same developmental stage - gastrulation (days 8-7.5 of pregnancy in rabbits and mice and around day 18 of development in humans). At this stage the human, rabbit and other vertebrate embryos are almost flat disc-shaped, while the mouse embryo is elongated cylinder-shaped. The images of the mouse and rabbit embryos were created as part of the current study, the image of the human embryo is taken from a study published in 2021 (Richard CV Tyser et al. Single-cell transcriptomic characterization of a gastrulating human embryo. Nature 600: 285-289)

In the rabbit hole

The institute's scientists developed a method that allows real-time monitoring of the development of embryos at the beginning of their journey and applied it for the first time to rabbits. The comparison they made between embryonic development in rabbits and mice gave rise to answers to fascinating questions about
Namib desert beetle. Photo: Igor Karamlev, Paxel

Removes insects

Development of water collection and transport systems based on the characteristics of the desert beetle and the female beetle

Between matching and cutting

Dr. Assaf Behat, CEO of Kalia Biotech at the Life Sciences Baltics 2014 conference held in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, September 2014. Photo: Avi Blizovsky

Preserve life in the sea of ​​death

the lungs

artificial lung

Prof. Lawrence Marnett, right, and his colleagues, Prof. Jashim Uddin, right, Prof. David Piston and Brenda Crews, research a compound that causes tumors to glow. Photography: Joe Howell

Luminescent compounds for the detection of cancerous tumors

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Doctoral student on the road - part six - Roy's lecture