Picture credits
You. We. Uni. - Let's team up to shape the future | Image: Daniel Peter / icue
Open trap of Dionaea muscipula with potential prey. Middle: basal part of a trigger hair, where action potentials are elicited in the sensory cells upon touch stimulation. During the late phase of the action potential, potassium ions need to be reimported into the sensory cells via KDM1 to enable the generation of consecutive action potentials. | Image: Ines Kreuzer, Sönke Scherzer / Universität Würzburg
The longer the sword of the male (bottom), the greater the chances of its bearer being interested by a female (top). In the swordtail fish (Xiphophorus hellerii), scientists have now identified the genetic basis of sword growth. (Image: Georg Schneider / University of Würzburg) | Image: Georg Schneider / Universität Würzburg
Portrait photo of Andrea Christina Felfe | Image: Wiwi-Fakultät / Universität Würzburg
Sphingolipid expansion microscopy (ExM) of tenfold expanded cells infected with chlamydia. The bacterial membranes are marked green; the inner and outer membranes of the bacteria can be distinguished (c). Under (a) confocal laser scanning and under (b) structured illumination microscopy (SIM). Scale bars: 10 and 2 microns in the small white rectangles respectively. | Image: Arbeitsgruppe Sauer / Universität Würzburg
Image: pixelwg / Jörg Bandmann
Monocyte-derived dendritic cells after an infection with Aspergillus fumigatus (red) and the human cytomegalovirus (green). | Image: AG Löffler
The Würzburg Highly Cited Researchers 2020: Hermann Einsele, Rainer Hedrich, Andreas Rosenwald, Jörg Vogel, Frank Würthner, and the Citation Laureate Laurens Molenkamp. | Image: privat
About 40 percent of all children who are dyslexic become mentally ill as they are often stigmatised and marginalised. But in fact, they are just as intelligent as other children. | Image: LightFieldStudios / iStock
The egg came first. Then the bee larvae grow up in the incubator and are regularly fed with a pipette. The sense of taste of adult honey bees is examined via their antennae. | Image: AG Scheiner
Super-resolution images made in Würzburg: Expansion microscopy ExM can be used to precisely depict fine structures of the brain whose shape changes during learning and memory processes. Pyramid cells from the hippocampus of the mouse line Thy1-eGFP can be seen. | Image: Team Markus Sauer / Universität Würzburg
Breeding system of the sugarcane shot-hole borer Xyleborus affinis in a glass tube with artificial culture medium. At the end of a tunnel you can see a mother beetle with larvae. The tunnel walls are covered with a whitish-coloured layer of food and weed fungi. | Image: Peter Biedermann / Universität Würzburg
The schematically shown ribozyme (green) binds to the target RNA (blue) by base pairing and installs the methyl group (red flag) at a defined site of a selected adenine. The reaction product m1A is shown in the red circle. | Image: Claudia Höbartner / Universität Würzburg
Artistic representation of human stomach cells infected with Helicobacter pylori, showing the special Hummingbird cell shape induced by the bacterium. | Image: Lehrstuhl für Molekulare Infektionsbiologie II / Universität Würzburg / SCIGRAPHIX
Photo of a Venus flytrap with an insect inside. | Image: Sönke Scherzer / Universität Würzburg
Two point mutations are responsible for the fact that arginine is found in the NFATc1 protein instead of the amino acid lysine. This exchange prevents sumoylation and makes the affected T cells less aggressive. | Image: Sumo-Ringer: miceking, Can Stock Photo / Collage: Friederike Berberich-Siebelt