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High-Tech Cellular Imaging


Article # : 16844 

Section : NATURAL SCIENCE
Issue Date : 9 / 1989  2,292 Words
Author : Peter J. Lea and Martin J. Hollenberg
Peter J. Lea and Martin J. Hollenberg are members of the Department of Anatomy, faculty of medicine at the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. They, with D.H. Cormack, are authors of Stereo Atlas of the Cell (Toronto and Philadelphia: B.C. Decker, 1989).

       What in the human body is too small to be seen with the naked eye but is as complex in structure and function as a modern city?
       
        Imagine the complex activity that takes place in a city during one day--goods being manufactured and transported, food brought in via highway, garbage removed and transported, houses being built. The component of the human body that is comparable in complexity is, of course, a single cell. Analogous functions of all a city's efforts are constantly ongoing within the cell--the most basic component of life.
       
        Now compare our relative ability to observe these two organized complexes. If we observed the city from the window of an airplane, how much detail could we see? At best, we could see high rises, houses, highways, and maybe some people, as small as ants. Until recently, the best imaging of the cell was comparable to such a view. Imagine if instead of seeing, say, an office building, we could see a single pencil on a desk in an office inside that building. In terms of relative scale, the technique of high resolution scanning electron microscopy now permits us to observe the three-dimensional structure of the actual working units, called organelles, inside a single cell!
       
        Historical Perspective
       
        Early microscopists studied cells and tissues using glass lenses and light to magnify to a maximum of about 1,000 diameters. The smallest object they could resolve was some 2/10,000 of a millimeter--about the diameter of a red blood cell. The big advantage of the transmission electron microscope (TEM) was its ability to ... (1998 of 14366 Characters)
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