Hiebert et al. used a collagen peptide sensor to visualize lysyl oxidase-dependent collagen formation and remodeling during wound healing. The probe selectively detects newly produced or remodeling collagen, but not matured collagen fibers, and can be applied for in vivo wound imaging and for discerning differential remodeling in mice with altered collagen dynamics.
The orgaizing committee of the IMHS Seminar Series "The New Generation Scientists Invite" is pleased to invite you to the first Seminar held by Dr. Jürgen Knoblich, who pioneered organoid research and is the current director of the IMBA in Vienna. The Seminar will take place on Tuesday, 27.02.2024, at 10:30, in the seminar room HPM H33.
Cords and colleagues report a spatial resolved single-cell imaging mass cytometry analysis of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) in a non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cohort of 1’070 patients. Their data identify phenotypic and spatial features of CAFs that are associates with patient outcome in NSCLC.