Researchers use super-resolution imaging of cultured neurons (IMAGE)
Caption
Ruobo Zhou, assistant professor of chemistry, of biochemistry and molecular biology, and of biomedical engineering, on left, co-led the study with Jinyu Fei, a graduate student in the chemistry department in Penn State’s Eberly College of Science. Using super-resolution imaging of cultured neurons, their team was able to demonstrate that the MPS is far more active, behaving like a gatekeeper to serve as a kind of cellular traffic control for all major forms of endocytosis.
Credit
Jaydyn Isiminger / Penn State
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