World
Photo contest reveals strange beauty of the microscopic world
Each year, rigorous science and dazzling artistry meet in Nikon’s Small World photomicrography competition.
Started in 1975, the contest celebrates the beauty of images taken through a light microscope. Scientists and hobbyists alike enter, and the winner receives a $3,000 prize. This year, the competition celebrates its 50th anniversary, and it received about 2,100 photo entries from 80 countries.
If sometimes unnerving, the images are always stunning, and this year’s contest is no exception.
1st place
This year’s first place prize was awarded to a groundbreaking image of mouse brain tumor cells, taken by Bruno Cisterna, a faculty member at Augusta University’s Medical College of Georgia. The photo reveals how disruptions in the cell’s cytoskeleton – the structural framework and “highways” known as microtubules – can lead to diseases such as Alzheimer’s and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (better known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease).
Cisterna’s research was published in May in the Journal of Cell Biology.