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Results 21 - 30 of 1771 for Cell biology
  • Supplier Profile
    The Microscopy business group at Carl Zeiss is the world's only manufacturer of light, X-ray, electron, and ion microscopes. The company's extensive portfolio enables industrial, research and...
  • Supplier Profile
    HORIBA, headquartered in the United States, provides an extensive array of instruments and solutions for applications across a broad range of scientific R&D and QC measurements. HORIBA is a world...
  • Supplier Profile
    Bangs Laboratories, Inc. is a supplier of uniform polymeric and silica microsphere products for diagnostic, research, and flow cytometry applications. BLI's newest QuantumPlex flow cytometry...
  • Supplier Profile
    UCLA is a leader in many fields, pursuing its mission through excellence in education, research and service. Our faculty, students, and staff work together to advance knowledge in the sciences,...
  • News - 9 Dec 2014
    A very tiny red carpet is ready. The paparazzi are gathering as a daring experiment in communicating cell biology comes to the test—who will watch the three “Tell Your Own Cell...
  • News - 25 Sep 2014
    When the body forms new tissues during the healing process, cells must be able to communicate with each other. For years, scientists believed this communication happened primarily through chemical...
  • News - 16 Sep 2011
    Scientific instruments company FEI has entered into a partnership with Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) to establish the OHSU/FEI Living Lab for Cell Biology that will have advanced...
  • News - 23 Jun 2010
    Veeco Instruments Inc., the leading provider of scanning probe microscopes (SPM) to the nanoscience community announces the BioScope Catalyst Perfusing Stage Incubator to facilitate cell biology...
  • News - 17 Mar 2009
    The roots of synthetic biology stretch back only eight years, and the discipline is so new that it does not yet have an established definition. On the one hand, it can be considered from a microscopic...
  • News - 7 Oct 2008
    What does a mixture of two different kinds of cells have in common with a mixture of oil and water? The same basic force causes both mixtures to separate into two distinct regions. That is the...

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