File:C.-elegans-maximum-velocity-correlates-with-healthspan-and-is-maintained-in-worms-with-an-insulin-ncomms9919-s3.ogv
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[edit]DescriptionC.-elegans-maximum-velocity-correlates-with-healthspan-and-is-maintained-in-worms-with-an-insulin-ncomms9919-s3.ogv |
English: Supplementary Movie 2 A representative movie of control daf-2(e1370) worm's motility on food. Synchronized eggs (the same population as in supplementary movie 1) were transferred onto NGM plates seeded with OP50 bacteria. On Day 2 of adulthood, individual worms were picked from a NGM plate and transferred to a fresh NGM plate with OP50 bacteria. Immediately after transfer, the movement of the worm was recorded continuously for 10 min. When the worm ran out of the field of view, the plate was relocated to chase the worm as noted by the sudden changes of the field of view in the movie. Note that the worm starts to show a low locomotive activity within 2 min in this case. The movie is 10x faster than real time. At least 10 worms were filmed for the statistical analysis of the locomotive activity. |
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Source | Video file from Hahm J, Kim S, DiLoreto R, Shi C, Lee S, Murphy C, Nam H (2015). "C. elegans maximum velocity correlates with healthspan and is maintained in worms with an insulin receptor mutation". Nature Communications. DOI:10.1038/ncomms9919. PMID 26586186. PMC: 4656132. | ||
Author | Hahm J, Kim S, DiLoreto R, Shi C, Lee S, Murphy C, Nam H | ||
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This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 07:22, 30 October 2016 | 1 min 0 s, 784 × 784 (22.39 MB) | Open Access Media Importer Bot (talk | contribs) | Automatically uploaded media file from Open Access source. Please report problems or suggestions here. |
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Short title | Supplementary Movie 2 |
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Author | Hahm J, Kim S, DiLoreto R, Shi C, Lee S, Murphy C, Nam H |
Usage terms | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
Image title | A representative movie of control daf-2(e1370) worm's motility on food. Synchronized eggs (the same population as in supplementary movie 1) were transferred onto NGM plates seeded with OP50 bacteria. On Day 2 of adulthood, individual worms were picked from a NGM plate and transferred to a fresh NGM plate with OP50 bacteria. Immediately after transfer, the movement of the worm was recorded continuously for 10 min. When the worm ran out of the field of view, the plate was relocated to chase the worm as noted by the sudden changes of the field of view in the movie. Note that the worm starts to show a low locomotive activity within 2 min in this case. The movie is 10x faster than real time. At least 10 worms were filmed for the statistical analysis of the locomotive activity. |
Software used | Xiph.Org libtheora 1.1 20090822 (Thusnelda) |
Date and time of digitizing | 2015-11-20 |