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  • 238524521008024119212268430257158836503PublicAssets/3525<em>Bacillus anthracis</em> (anthrax) cells being killed by a fluorescent <em>trans</em>-translation inhibitor, which disrupts bacterial protein synthesis. The inhibitor is naturally fluorescent and looks blue when it is excited by ultraviolet light in the microscope. This is a color version of <a href="https://images.nigms.nih.gov/pages/DetailPage.aspx?imageid2=3481">Image 3481</a>.Kenneth Keiler, Penn State UniversityKeiler lab, Penn State UniversityPhotograph

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    CellsChemistry, Biochemistry, and PharmacologyTools and Techniques

    Bacillus anthracis being killed

    Bacillus anthracis (anthrax) cells being killed by a fluorescent trans-translation inhibitor, which disrupts bacterial protein synthesis. The inhibitor is naturally fluorescent and looks blue when it is excited by ultraviolet light in the microscope. This is a color version of Image 3481.

    Source

    Kenneth Keiler, Penn State University

    Credit Line

    Keiler lab, Penn State University

    Record Type

    Photograph

    ID

    3525

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