But now, a team of Stanford University scientists has finally found an agent that can reversibly make skin transparent ...
Researchers at Stanford University made the skin of mice transparent using the yellow no. 5 food dye, otherwise known as ...
Scientists have found that massaging tartrazine-aka "Yellow 5," aka the food dye used in Doritos-into the skin of mice can ...
A commonly used food coloring can make the skin of a living mouse transparent, allowing scientists to see its organs function, according to a new study.
Courtesy of Maggie Bartlett via Wikimedia Commons  What if you could make your skin transparent and then turn it opaque again? Soon enough, that might be a possibility. And if you’re a lab mouse, ...
Stanford University researchers have discovered that tartrazine, a yellow-orange food dye found in Doritos, can make mouse ...
In an article published in Science, Ou and his collegues report that they made the skin on the skulls and abdomens of live mice transparent by applying to the areas a mixture of water and tartrazine.
In a new study, scientists used a common yellow food coloring mixed with water to make the skin and skulls on live mice ...
In a new study, scientists used a common yellow food coloring mixed with water to make the skin and skulls on live mice transparent. Engadget ...