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Indian Scientists Develop 'CLEAR' Imaging Technology for Advanced Cancer and Brain Disease Research | BulletsIn

Indian Scientists Develop 'CLEAR' Imaging Technology for Advanced Cancer and Brain Disease Research | BulletsIn

Bullets In 1 week ago

Researchers at JNCASR have developed the innovative 'CLEAR' protein imaging platform that enables high-resolution mapping of multiple proteins in biological samples, offering major breakthroughs for cancer, neurological disorders and precision medicine research.

BulletsIn

  • Scientists at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research developed the new 'CLEAR' technology for advanced protein imaging in biological research.
  • The CLEAR platform stands for Cleavable Light-Erased Antibody Reporter and enables repeated protein imaging within the same biological sample.
  • The technology helps scientists visualize and map a large number of proteins using a single fluorescent marker system.
  • Researchers stated that the platform overcomes major limitations faced in conventional spatial protein mapping techniques.
  • The imaging system uses special light-cleavable probes that allow fluorescent signals to be erased using 365 nm LED light after every imaging cycle.
  • Scientists can repeatedly label, erase and re-image different proteins in the same cell or tissue sample with high precision.
  • The technology was developed under the leadership of researcher Sarit S. Agasti at JNCASR with collaboration from researchers at the Indian Institute of Science.
  • Researchers compared the process to a reusable chalkboard where protein images can be erased and recreated multiple times.
  • The CLEAR platform supports high-resolution and high-plex imaging across single cells, tissues and complex biological systems.
  • Scientists believe the technology could significantly improve cancer biology, immunology and neurobiological research capabilities.
  • The imaging platform may also help in early disease detection, immune system analysis and understanding cellular behaviour in greater detail.
  • Researchers said the technology could support future precision medicine and personalised treatment strategies through detailed molecular analysis.
  • The findings of the study were officially published in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Chemical Science.
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