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Blog posts

The 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics

The winners of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics. Niklas Elmehed/© Nobel Media AB 2018 Congratulations to the winners of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics: Arthur Ashkin, Gérard Mourou and Donna Strickland for their pioneering work on lasers. Among them, Arthur Ashkin was recognized for developing the first optical tweezers.  We…
Jerom Langeveld
3 October 2018
Single-Molecule Workshop at the University of CambridgeBlog posts

Single-Molecule Workshop at the University of Cambridge

An engaging single-molecule workshop organized by LUMICKS took place at the University of Cambridge. During the workshop, the participants performed state-of-the-art experiments to examine DNA-protein interactions and DNA mechanics in real-time and at the single-molecule level, using the C-Trap® optical tweezers - fluorescence microscopy system. Next to the practical sessions, Matt Newton, a researcher from…
Jerom Langeveld
2 October 2018
Leiden c-trap installation Alireza Mashaghi LabBlog posts

C-Trap™ installed at Leiden University

LUMICKS is happy to announce that a new C-Trap™ optical tweezers is now housed in the lab of Dr. Alireza Mashaghi at Leiden University, the Netherlands. Dr. Mashaghi’s group will use the C-Trap to perform single-molecule experiments and investigate molecular folding processes. In particular, the group aims to understand how chaperones reshape…
2 October 2018
Blog posts

LUMICKS Featured in Cambridge Independent

This week’s issue of Cambridge Independent featured an article about our partnership with AstraZeneca and the University of Cambridge! We are proud to see the field of dynamic single-molecule analysis reaching a new milestone once again. This brings us closer to our goal: improving human health by providing unparalleled insight…
Jerom Langeveld
23 July 2018
C-Trap® installed at Semmelweis UniversityBlog posts

C-Trap™ installed at Semmelweis University

LUMICKS is proud to announce the installation of a new C-Trap® optical tweezers-fluorescence microscopy system in the lab of Professor Miklos Kellermayer at the Semmelweis University in Budapest, Hungary. A major focus of Prof. Kellermayer's lab is in uncovering the molecular mechanics of the muscle protein titin. This is a protein that defines the…
Jerom Langeveld
24 May 2018
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