When Anton van Leeuwenhoek revolutionized the microscope, he opened a window to a whole new world: a world of living things so small no one had ever seen them before or even dreamed had ever existed. He saw life teeming in a drop of water and blood corpuscles racing through capillaries. His invention would change science forever.
Some 350 years later, a look through the microscope continues to fascinate. That fascination is the basis for Nikon鈥檚 Small World Photomicrography Competition, regarded as the leading forum for showcasing the beauty and complexity of life as seen through the microscope.
PhD student Oliver Braubach likes nothing better than to take out his camera and peel off some shots. But between polishing his thesis and applying for post-doc positions, there hasn鈥檛 been much time for creative pursuits.
'Speck of dust'
Even so, there鈥檚 something rather strange and beautiful about what he views through the microscope in the lab: the tiny olfactory bulbs of the zebrafish brain. Captured with his confocal microscope, the bulbs鈥攏o bigger than a speck of dust鈥攈ave been magnified 150 times.
鈥淭hese bulbs are such an intriguingly wired part of the brain,鈥 explains Mr. Braubach, who entered his photo in the Small World international competition and captured third place. 鈥淚 particularly like this image, you can see the entire structure. Every time I look at it, it just amazes me.鈥
Supervised by Professors Alan Fine and Roger Croll in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mr. Braubach studies the zebrafish brain, which he says is remarkably similar to the human brain. The olfactory bulbs are used by the fish to process smells.
Asked if the zebrafish has a nose, Mr. Braubach responds that it does, and indeed, its skin is also incredibly sensitive to chemical stimuli. 鈥淚t鈥檚 basically a swimming tongue and nose,鈥 he says with a laugh. 鈥淚t鈥檚 such a fascinating animal.鈥
Transparent
What makes the zebrafish especially interesting to study is that it is almost transparent, allowing researchers to look inside the brain while it is living. That means they can present an odour聽to the fish and watch as areas of its brain 鈥渓ight up.鈥 The fish can also regenerate its fins, skin, heart, and brain under some conditions, according to a聽recent study reported聽in Nature. (See story: in The New York Times)
With his thesis just weeks from completion, Mr. Braubach is taking up a postdoc position with Yale University. He says he鈥檚 going to miss Halifax, his home since he arrived here as an exchange student in high school from the tiny mountainous country of Liechtenstein in Europe. 鈥淲hen I鈥檓 done my PhD, I鈥檓 going to buy myself a beer and take my camera out鈥攆or fun.鈥
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