All Stories

  1. High Molecular Crowding in Repair Foci Surrounding DNA Breaks, Measured by Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy
  2. Dominant-Negative Form of SIGIRR: SIGIRRΔE8 Promotes Tumor Growth Through Regulation of Metabolic Pathways
  3. STRIDE—a fluorescence method for direct, specific in situ detection of individual single- or double-strand DNA breaks in fixed cells
  4. Lattice Shrinkage by Incorporation of Recombinant Starmaker‐Like Protein within Bioinspired Calcium Carbonate Crystals
  5. PML-like subnuclear bodies, containing XRCC1, juxtaposed to DNA replication-based single-strand breaks
  6. Aqueous mounting media increasing tissue translucence improve image quality in Structured Illumination Microscopy of thick biological specimen
  7. Molecular determinants of FKBP39 subcellular distribution.
  8. Super-Resolution Binding Activated Localization Microscopy through reversible change of DNA conformation
  9. Toll-Like Receptor 4, but Not Neutrophil Extracellular Traps, Promote IFN Type I Expression to Enhance Th2 Responses to Nippostrongylus brasiliensis
  10. Changes in lipid membrane mechanics induced by di- and tri-phenyltins
  11. The 4D nucleome in Kraków - Prospects for an emerging field
  12. Involvement of cell surface 90 kDa heat shock protein (HSP90) in pattern recognition by human monocyte-derived macrophages
  13. Stage-specific embryonic antigen-4 as a novel marker of ductal cells of human eccrine sweat glands
  14. Human SUV3 helicase in the cell nucleus regulates the growth rate of HeLa cells.
  15. Imaging chromatin nanostructure with binding-activated localization microscopy based on DNA structure fluctuations
  16. Low level phosphorylation of histone H2AX on serine 139 (γH2AX) is not associated with DNA double-strand breaks
  17. Quantitative super-resolution localization microscopy of DNA in situ using Vybrant® DyeCycle™ Violet fluorescent probe
  18. Localization microscopy of DNA in situ using Vybrant ® DyeCycle™ Violet fluorescent probe: A new approach to study nuclear nanostructure at single molecule resolution
  19. Subnuclear localization, rates and effectiveness of UVC-induced unscheduled DNA synthesis visualized by fluorescence widefield, confocal and super-resolution microscopy
  20. The cellular internalization of liposome encapsulated protoporphyrin IX by HeLa cells
  21. Two stages of XRCC1 recruitment and two classes of XRCC1 foci formed in response to low level DNA damage induced by visible light, or stress triggered by heat shock
  22. Interactions of tumour-derived micro(nano)vesicles with human gastric cancer cells
  23. Activation of new replication foci under conditions of replication stress
  24. The Nucleocapsid Protein of Human Coronavirus NL63
  25. Nucleolus-like bodies of fully-grown mouse oocytes contain key nucleolar proteins but are impoverished for rRNA
  26. Fenofibrate enhances barrier function of endothelial continuum within the metastatic niche of prostate cancer cells
  27. UV-induced Spectral Shift and Protonation of DNA Fluorescent Dye Hoechst 33258
  28. Evaluation of acridine orange, LysoTracker Red, and quinacrine as fluorescent probes for long-term tracking of acidic vesicles
  29. Single molecule localization microscopy of the distribution of chromatin using Hoechst and DAPI fluorescent probes
  30. Different rates of DNA replication at early versus late S-phase sections: Multiscale modeling of stochastic events related to DNA content/EdU (5-ethynyl-2′deoxyuridine) incorporation distributions
  31. Spatial heterogeneity of dynamics of H1 linker histone
  32. Blue-light-activated phototropin2 trafficking from the cytoplasm to Golgi/post-Golgi vesicles
  33. Photosensitized Damage Inflicted on Plasma Membranes of Live Cells by An Extracellular Generator of Singlet Oxygen—A Linear Dependence of A Lethal Dose on Light Intensity
  34. DNA damage signaling, impairment of cell cycle progression, and apoptosis triggered by 5‐ethynyl‐2′‐deoxyuridine incorporated into DNA
  35. Daunomycin, an antitumor DNA intercalator, influences histone–DNA interactions
  36. Analysis of spatial correlations between patterns of DNA damage response and DNA replication in nuclei of cells subjected to replication stress or oxidative damage
  37. Relationship between DNA damage response, initiated by camptothecin or oxidative stress, and DNA replication, analyzed by quantitative 3D image analysis
  38. Kinetic Viability Assays Using DRAQ7 Probe
  39. UV‐activated conversion of Hoechst 33258, DAPI, and Vybrant DyeCycle fluorescent dyes into blue‐excited, green‐emitting protonated forms
  40. Col‐F, a fluorescent probe for ex vivo confocal imaging of collagen and elastin in animal tissues
  41. Dynamics of the HP1β-PCNA-containing complexes in DNA replication and repair
  42. Inducing local DNA damage by visible light to study chromatin repair
  43. Real‐time cell viability assays using a new anthracycline derivative DRAQ7®
  44. DNA damage signaling assessed in individual cells in relation to the cell cycle phase and induction of apoptosis
  45. The composite nature of the interaction between nuclear receptors EcR and DHR38
  46. A heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1) dimer and a proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) protein interact in vivo and are parts of a multiprotein complex involved in DNA replication and DNA repair
  47. Relationship of DNA damage signaling to DNA replication following treatment with DNA topoisomerase inhibitors camptothecin/topotecan, mitoxantrone, or etoposide
  48. Sequences that direct subcellular traffic of the Drosophila methoprene-tolerant protein (MET) are located predominantly in the PAS domains
  49. Induction of DNA damage signaling by oxidative stress in relation to DNA replication as detected using “click chemistry”
  50. Light-induced isomerization of the LHCII-bound xanthophyll neoxanthin: Possible implications for photoprotection in plants
  51. Method of calibration of a fluorescence microscope for quantitative studies
  52. Cell fixation in zinc salt solution is compatible with DNA damage response detection by phospho‐specific antibodies
  53. Conditions for using FRAP as a quantitative technique—Influence of the bleaching protocol
  54. Rationale for the real‐time and dynamic cell death assays using propidium iodide
  55. Interaction of human peripheral blood monocytes with apoptotic polymorphonuclear cells
  56. Recruitment of heterochromatin protein 1 to DNA repair sites
  57. Heterochromatin protein 1 is recruited to various types of DNA damage
  58. Induction of DNA damage response by the supravital probes of nucleic acids
  59. Studies on the role of the receptor protein motifs possibly involved in electrostatic interactions on the dopamine D1 and D2 receptor oligomerization
  60. The variety of complexes formed by EcR and Usp nuclear receptors in the nuclei of living cells
  61. Interaction of a DNA intercalator DRAQ5, and a minor groove binder SYTO17, with chromatin in live cells—Influence on chromatin organization and histone—DNA interactions
  62. Cytometric assessment of DNA damage by exogenous and endogenous oxidants reports aging‐related processes
  63. Scattering of Exciting Light by Live Cells in Fluorescence Confocal Imaging: Phototoxic Effects and Relevance for FRAP Studies
  64. Single‐ and two‐photon spectral imaging of intrinsic fluorescence of transformed human hepatocytes
  65. Actin cytoskeleton in Arabidopsis thaliana under blue and red light
  66. EcR and Usp, components of the ecdysteroid nuclear receptor complex, exhibit differential distribution of molecular determinants directing subcellular trafficking
  67. Light-dependent reversal of dark-chilling induced changes in chloroplast structure and arrangement of chlorophyll–protein complexes in bean thylakoid membranes
  68. Phototoxicity, distribution and kinetics of association of UVA-activated chlorpromazine, 8-methoxypsoralen, and 4,6,4′-trimethylangelicin in Jurkat cells
  69. Ultraspiracle promotes the nuclear localization of ecdysteroid receptor in mammalian cells
  70. Confocal Fluorescence Imaging of Photosensitised DNA Denaturation in Cell Nuclei
  71. Minimizing photobleaching during confocal microscopy of fluorescent probes bound to chromatin: role of anoxia and photon flux
  72. Backscattered light confocal imaging of intracellular MTT‐formazan crystals
  73. Confocal Microscopy: Quantitative Analytical Capabilities
  74. Large-conductance K+ channel openers NS1619 and NS004 as inhibitors of mitochondrial function in glioma cells
  75. Three-dimensional Visualization of Connexin 43 on the Human Cardiomyocytes
  76. Mitochondrial and nonmitochondrial reduction of MTT: Interaction of MTT with TMRE, JC‐1, and NAO mitochondrial fluorescent probes
  77. Interaction of oxygen-sensitive luminescent probes Ru(phen)32+ and Ru(bipy)32+ with animal and plant cells in vitro
  78. Chromatin condensation and sensitivity of DNA in situ to denaturation during cell cycle and apoptosis — a confocal microscopy study
  79. Differential effects of oncostatin M and leukaemia inhibitory factor expression in astrocytoma cells
  80. The Role of Plasma Membrane in Bioreduction of Two Tetrazolium Salts, MTT, and CTC
  81. Opposite role of changes in mitochondrial membrane potential in different apoptotic processes
  82. Corrigendum to: ‘Reduction of a tetrazolium salt, CTC, by intact HepG2 human hepatoma cells: subcellular localisation of reducing systems’
  83. Mitochondrial heterogeneity during staurosporine-induced apoptosis in HL60 cells: Analysis at the single cell and single organelle level
  84. Reduction of a tetrazolium salt, CTC, by intact HepG2 human hepatoma cells: subcellular localisation of reducing systems
  85. Extracellular Reduction of Cat1 Free Radical by Transformed Human Hepatocytes
  86. Apoptosis‐like, reversible changes in plasma membrane asymmetry and permeability, and transient modifications in mitochondrial membrane potential induced by curcumin in rat thymocytes
  87. Nonperturbing test for cytotoxicity in isolated cells and spheroids, using electron paramagnetic resonance
  88. Distribution of 5-doxylstearic acid in the membranes of mammalian cells
  89. Cell-cell contact affects cellular sensitivity to hyperthermia