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    At a Snail’s Pace

    This is a picture of the sea snail, Aplysia californica or California sea hare, which is widely used to examine how the activity of nerve cells evokes fundamental behaviours. I study how cation channels, which are specialized proteins that form pores allowing charged molecules in and out of the nerve cell, influence cellular activity. I use electrophysiology and molecular biology to study the reproductive behavior of Aplysia. My research is focused on studying the effects of reactive oxygen species on cation channels, which dictate reproduction in bag cell neurons of the snail.
    Submission Year: 
    2015-16
    Photographer's affiliation: 
    Graduate student
    Academic areas: 
    Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs
    Health Sciences
    Photo: 
    At a Snail’s Pace
    Categories: 
    Grad student
    School of Graduate Studies
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    School of Medicine
    Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences
    Materials Discovery and Molecular Design
    Ecology, Biodiversity and the Natural Environment
    Health, Wellness and the Determinants of Human Health
    Location of photograph: 
    Botterell Hall, Queen's University
    Prize name: 
    Photographer's name: 
    Alamjeet Kaur Chauhan
    Display Photographers Affiltion + Faculty or Department: 
    Graduate Student, Biomedical and Molecular Sciences