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Colorized transmission electron micrograph of influenza A/H3N2 virus particles, isolated from a patient sample and then propagated in cell culture. Influenza A virus particles adapt shape—as ...
An electron microscope image of the CDC’s recreated 1918 Influenza virus, seen here, 18 hours after infection. Courtesy: CDC/Dr. Terrence Tumpey Despite recent advances in microbiology ...
A technological revolution is helping Scripps Research scientists see the molecules that undermine human health, from ...
There are technical barriers to studying early virus-cell interactions with high temporal resolution. Here, using super-resolution microscopy and immobilized influenza A virions enabling live ...
Researchers at the University of California, Irvine have developed a live-imaging system, Phollow, that tracks individual ...
As the world’s most infamous flu pandemic (often referred to as the Spanish flu) raged from 1918–1920, scientists had very few tools available to help them combat or understand the disease.
An electron microscope image of the CDC’s recreated 1918 Influenza virus, seen here, 18 hours after infection. Courtesy: CDC/Dr. Terrence Tumpey Despite recent advances in microbiology ...
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