December 16, 2020
© Akanksha Jain et al. / MPI-CBG
November 5, 2020
Relaxing during the stressful times of gastrulation
Researchers uncover a mechanism that, similar to wound-healing, converts tissue during a spreading event into a fluid-like state.
Bio-image Analysis Group
November 2, 2020
New Technology Development Group Leader: Robert Haase
© MPI-CBG
October 12, 2020
How will we live in the future?
Opening of the DRESDEN-concept science exhibition in front of the Dresden Kulturpalast
© Dr. Elisabeth Fischer-Friedrich
Science RA3 Fischer-Friedrich Group
September 2, 2020
How do tumor cells divide in the crowd?
Scientists led by Dr. Elisabeth Fischer-Friedrich, group leader at the Excellence Cluster Physics of Life (PoL) and the Biotechnology Center TU Dresden (BIOTEC) studied how cancer cells are able to divide in a crowded tumor tissue and connected it to the hallmark of cancer progression and metastasis, the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT).
© Left schematic: Lokesh Pimpale et al. / right schematic: openclipart.org by danjiro
August 3, 2020
Go with the counter-rotating flow!
Counter-rotating flows drive cell movement during cell division
RA3
May 28, 2020
Twist and torque in the cellular nanocosmos: Diez group detects biophysical forces of molecular motors in 3D
© BIOTEC
RA3 Research Groups Fischer-Friedrich Group
December 2, 2019
New PoL Research Group Leader: Elisabeth Fischer-Friedrich
Optical Microscopy Group
November 3, 2019
New Technology Development Group Leader: Bert Nitzsche
© Robert Lohse
July 22, 2019
TU Dresden retains its title as University of Excellence
© MPI-PKS
April 9, 2019
Unraveling growth of organs with computer science and physics
Workshop on "Image-based Modeling and Simulation of Morphogenesis" brings leading expertise to Dresden
© MPI-CBG
April 3, 2019
Children’s University - How does an organism form?
Stephan Grill talks in front of 500 curious kids