Picture this: The 2nd annual JBC Methods Madness tournament
If you've ever been part of a March Madness office pool, you know the drill. Fill out your brackets to predict which National College Athletic Association basketball teams will prevail, put a dollar in the kitty, and then cringe as your brackets get busted — usually well before the Final Four.
This is the Journal of Biological Chemistry version, so instead of teams we bring you competing scientific methods and a chance to sway the outcome with votes (and maybe some trash talk) on Twitter. #TeamMassSpec is the 2021 champion, beating out last year’s winner, #Team Cryo-EM, in a nail-biter, every-vote-counts finish.
OK, not exactly like March Madness — but we do have some pretty adorable team mascots. Thanks to Vic De Luz, the executive assistant in the ͵͵ and ͵͵ Biology’s publications department, our competing methods have been brought to life. Vic introduces the mascots below and explains the inspiration for each one.
A nostalgic pair of paper anaglyph glasses highlights this organoid's 3D distinction. |
In the same way a prism divides white light into its colorful spectrum of wavelengths, chromatography separates a mixture into its components. |
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It's tough to encapsulate all the advancements in live-cell imaging in one cartoon, so this cell-fie gets at the broader concept. |
I focused on the chain termination step of Sanger sequencing here, in which the target DNA is "clipped" into fragments of various lengths. |
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I'm always enchanted by mega–high-resolution photos when I see them online. I wanted to evoke that same sense of massive scale and clarity here, even though spotting a single cell from space might be hyperbolic (for now). |
A self-improving algorithm is a pretty abstract concept to draw, but the human mind improves with experience the same way. Therefore, I've plugged a familiar-looking brain into a computer. |
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Last year's winner, cryogenic electron microscopy, is literally the coolest imaging method, represented by this icy microscope. Stay frosty, #TeamCryo! |
Sometimes a name demands a pun. This is one of my favorites — a Western blot. |
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Possibly the cutest method mascot, this little guy has Rosalind Franklin's iconic "Photo 51" of DNA's double-helix structure as a big round eye. |
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A lot of widely used methods in BMB seek similar goals — to differentiate this image from PCR's, I leaned on Dolly the sheep, the original cloning mascot. |
Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats', aka CRISPR's. claim to fame is its precision, and the arrow and bullseye target communicates that clearly. |
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I interpreted "massively parallel sequencing" fairly literally in this one. A more realistic representation would be much taller! |
Color can be communicative — I used neon yellow and cyan to suggest fluorescent chromophores in this energy transfer fist bump. |
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The flash of light highlights the neuron in gold and sends little golden signals spreading outward. |
To emphasize that the genes are created new from scratch, I chose a pair of hands knitting together a strand of DNA. |
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One of our scientists on staff showed me some composite diagrams of protein structures determined through nuclear magnetic resonance, and I borrowed the look of them for this drawing, spilling right out of a specimen tube. |
The downward and outward moving arrows show the exponentially increasing number of the DNA fragments reproduced through polymerase chain reaction over the rapid generations. |
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