Yearning to Connect: Nerve Cells Reach for One Another

Yearning to Connect: Nerve Cells Reach for One Another

Collections: Image Award Winners, Cancer Discovery Science

2011 Award Winner

Stephanie Gupton
Gertler Lab

Koch Institute at MIT, MIT Department of Biology

"Super-resolution" fluorescence micrograph

Cancers are very good plagiarists.  In order to perform complex, destructive tasks, they borrow mechanisms from healthy cells.  To achieve rapid growth, for example, many cancer cells reactivate genes normally involved in embryo development.

Here, Stephanie Gupton captures normal nerve cells extending cellular projections that they will use to connect with other cells.  This process is facilitated by the proteins actin (red) and mena (green).  Metastatic cancer cells often adapt these same processes to mobilize and invade healthy tissues.  Stephanie and her colleagues in the Gertler Lab study nerve cells like these in order to better understand how cancer cells grow, move and spread.

Video

Stephanie Gupton explains how and why she captured this image of developing nerve cells.

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