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  • 1021102114388385105105728151051057281PublicAssets/6970Multicellular yeast called snowflake yeast that researchers created through many generations of directed evolution from unicellular yeast. Cells are connected to one another by their cell walls, shown in blue. Stained cytoplasm (green) and membranes (magenta) show that the individual cells remain separate. This image was captured using spinning disk confocal microscopy. <Br><Br> Related to images <a href="https://images.nigms.nih.gov/pages/DetailPage.aspx?imageid2=6969">6969</a> and <a href="https://images.nigms.nih.gov/pages/DetailPage.aspx?imageid2=6971">6971</a>.William Ratcliff, Georgia Institute of Technology.Anthony Burnetti, Ozan Bozdağ, and William Ratcliff, Georgia Institute of Technology.Photograph

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    CellsTools and Techniques

    Snowflake yeast

    Multicellular yeast called snowflake yeast that researchers created through many generations of directed evolution from unicellular yeast. Cells are connected to one another by their cell walls, shown in blue. Stained cytoplasm (green) and membranes (magenta) show that the individual cells remain separate. This image was captured using spinning disk confocal microscopy.

    Related to images 6969 and 6971.

    Source

    William Ratcliff, Georgia Institute of Technology.

    Credit Line

    Anthony Burnetti, Ozan Bozdağ, and William Ratcliff, Georgia Institute of Technology.

    Record Type

    Photograph

    ID

    6970

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