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Seeing living brain cells fire signals at high magnification by matching the refractive index between tissue and lens

19 April 2026

A Clear Solution

The bending of light (refraction) as it passes through one transparent substance to another is problematic for high-powered microscopes. As light passes through the sample to the air and then the lens the refraction causes blurring, reducing resolution and depth of focus. To minimise this, such microscopes use oil between the coverslip and lens. Light travels through oil and glass similarly (they have similar refraction indices) and so bends less. But what if researchers want to observe living cells at high magnification? Perhaps they want to see brain cells firing (with fluorescent calcium dye), for example, which is what’s happening in this video. Ideally, directly between the lens and brain tissue they’d have a nontoxic, transparent solution of the same refraction index as the tissue itself. SeeDB – also known as bovine serum albumin – is just that. The video shows cells without, then with SeeDB and the improvement is, well, clear.

Written by Ruth Williams

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BPoD stands for Biomedical Picture of the Day. Managed by the MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences until Jul 2023, it is now run independently by a dedicated team of scientists and writers. The website aims to engage everyone, young and old, in the wonders of biology, and its influence on medicine. The ever-growing archive of more than 4000 research images documents over a decade of progress. Explore the collection and see what you discover. Images are kindly provided for inclusion on this website through the generosity of scientists across the globe.

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