Best Image Prize

Best Image Prize

Background

Judging Panel:  Website, Media and Communications Committee. 

Deadline Dates for Prizes:   31st May and 31st October.

Images:  Should be a single colourful graphical image as a JPEG or TIF file with a minimum resolution of 300dpi and a maximum size of 3Mb, for use on our website/newsletter or other media. Please confirm that you have obtained permission from the people in any images that you send to us that they are content for their images to be used on the Anatomical Society website/newsletter or other media. By submitting an image you are confirming that you have obtained permission from the people in any photos that you send to us that they are content for their photos to be used on the Anatomical Society website/newsletter and other media.

Categories: There are two categories that images can be entered under: scientific image category and artwork image category. Scientific images include histology, microscopy and radiological images and are typically produced from anatomical research projects. Artwork images include drawings, paintings and photographs and are typically produced for educational purposes. Applicants will be asked to choose which category they are entering their image for on the application form.

Short Title: Title to identify image (no more than 3 words)

Narrative:  A short narrative should accompany the image (50 words - similar to a figure legend). For example: what it is; how it was produced; why it is special and so forth.

Number of images: An applicant may submit not more than 1 image per category for any one competition. Normally images can only be submitted to a single competition.

Copyright:  Applicants submitting images must either own the copyright of the image or have gained the explicit permission of the copyright holder for the image to be submitted for this award. By submitting an image (s) Applicants are confirming that either he/she own(s) the copyright of the image or have gained the explicit permission of the copyright holder for the image to be submitted for this award and to be used on the Anatomical Society website/newsletter and other media.

To download and print the poster for the Anatomical society Best Image Prize, please click here (to follow).

Eligibility:

The lead submitting author must  have been elected to membership by Council for at least a year at the application deadline date of the award, and be in good standing with their membership subscription. 

If a person is awarded:

(a) The Best Image Award (Artwork) then they cannot apply the following year for the Artwork Category.

(b) The Best Image Award (Scientific) then they cannot apply the following year for the Scientific Category.

(c) The Runner-up Best Image Award (Artwork) then they can apply the following year for the Artwork Category.

(d) The Runner-up Best Image Award (Scientific) then they can apply the following year for the Scientific Category.

Award:

£ 200 is awarded twice a year for both categories.

Submission: Complete entry form (NB. complete all boxes). Email as attachments the completed entry form and the image to theteam@anatsoc.org.uk

Entry Form

AS Best Image Award Entry Form Updated– v11 131124

BEST IMAGE AWARD (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

Outer plexiform layer of zebrafish retina

Description

Pedicles of 4 type of cones (UV Blue Green Red, bottom), 3 types of Horizontal Cell (H1 yellow, H2 and H3 orange), Many types of Bipolar cells (various colours, top). The dense neuropil of the OPL(near middle). The rod network and Mueller cells not shown. This is to illustrate the amazing complexity of the very first synaptic layer in the visual system which does a tremendous amount of information processing.

Submission Date

23.04.25

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor William A. Harris

University of Cambridge

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

None



BEST IMAGE AWARD RUNNER- UP (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

Osteoflora

Description

 

Scapulae were fabricated in white and clear resin from high-resolution scans to produce anatomically accurate models. These models were then hand-painted to highlight key skeletal landmarks and muscle origins and insertions to enhance their educational value. Two identical images of the models were overlayed to create the final floral patters.

Submission Date

29.05.25

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Jennifer Z. Paxton

University of Edinburgh

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Ms Iona Eldhose

University of Edinburgh




BEST IMAGE AWARD (SCIENCE CATEGORY) 

Image Title

Devil Tooth Bud

Description

 

Immunofluorescence of an explanted embryonic mouse molar treated with an inhibitor to Hedgehog signalling ex vivo. Dampening hedgehog signalling leads to ectopic tooth formation from the dental epithelium (Keratin14 in white) as shown by elevated Wnt signalling (Lef1 in red), highlighting the signals that control tooth number. Nuclei in blue.

Submission Date

 30.05.25

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor Abigail Tucker

King's College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Ms Litian Young

King's College London



BEST IMAGE AWARD RUNNER- UP (SCIENCE CATEGORY)

Image Title

Roots of Connection

Description

 

Dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons extend processes across a microRNA-activated scaffold, showing guided neural outgrowth necessary for the repair of chronic wounds. The image captures the early stages of connection formation on the bio engineered microenvironment. The confocal image displays cell nuclei in blue and beta-tubulin III in white.

Submission Date

 15.04.25

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Mr Juan Carlos Palomeque

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI)

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

None

BEST IMAGE AWARD (ARTWORK CATEGORY) FIRST EQUAL

Image Title

Under Your Skin

Description

 

A painting combining my two favourite elements: the aesthetics of neuroanatomy illustrations and the romantic style of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Oil on canvas.

Submission Date

30.10.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Ms Diyya Ameen

King’s College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

None



Image Title

Lower limb Painting

Description

 

Digital painting of a preserved wet specimen prepared to demonstrate the superficial muscles and vessels of the lower limb. This specimen highlights anatomical clarity in muscle orientation and vascular pathways, enhancing educational understanding of lower limb anatomy through precise visual representation.

Submission Date

31.10.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Mrs Humayra Bakar

University of St Andrews

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

None



BEST IMAGE AWARD RUNNER- UP (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

Hidden Forest

Description

 

This digital artwork transforms the bronchial tree into a living grove. With bronchi resembling rugged trunks and alveoli forming a delicate canopy, each branch breathes life. Originating from a hand-drawn sketch, this piece was digitally enhanced, blending art and anatomy to capture the lungs' hidden vitality.

Submission Date

30.10.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Noor Azzizah Omar

Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Ms Zulfa Mahiz

Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia




BEST IMAGE AWARD (SCIENCE CATEGORY) 

Image Title

Expression of FOXP2 and NR2F2

Description

 

Double immunostaining revealed that the transcription factors FOXP2 and NR2F2 are expressed in the developing human thalamus at 10 post-conception weeks (pcw). Notably, NR2F2 is localized to the prethalamus,ganglionice eminence and hypothalamus , while FOXP2 is detected in postmitotic cells within the thalamus.

Submission Date

31.10.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Maznah Abdullah Alhesain

University of Qassim, Saudi Arabia

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Dr Gavin Clowry

Newcastle University



BEST IMAGE AWARD RUNNER- UP (SCIENCE CATEGORY)

Image Title

Buffalo Corpus Luteum

Description

 

Corpus luteum of pregnancy showing Small and Large Luteal Cells encapsulated (dark red outline) by collagen fibers; located adjacent to network of capillaries (for progesterone release), a bigger blood vessel (RBCs in lumen) surrounded by dense collagen fibers visualized by Fluorescence Microscopy stained by PicroSirius Red (20X; Fluorescent Collagen Stain).

Submission Date

11.10.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Kritima Kapoor

Guru Angad Dev Veterinary and Animal Sciences University (GADVASU), India

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

None

BEST IMAGE PRIZE (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

3D Printed Lungs

Description

 

These 3D printed lung models were created from 3D scan data of a historic teaching model and painted in textbook and cadaveric colours. There is often a disconnect between what students see in textbooks vs the laboratory, therefore, these models aid to bridge the gap for students learning.

Submission Date

31.05.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Ms Victoria McCulloch, University of Edinburgh

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Ms Kilmeny Wong, University of Edinburgh



RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

Apoptotic constellation

Description

 

Neonatal mouse retinal ganglion cells undergo programmed cell death. Apoptotic cells on the edge of the growing vasculature can be labelled with specific markers such as Yo-PRO1 that fluoresce when binding to fragmenting DNA. Composition (arranged by blue-yellow, green-red colour opponency) inspired by Andy Warhol paintings.

Submission Date

31.05.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor Evelyne Sernagor, Newcastle University

 

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Dr Michael Savage, Newcastle University

Ms Cori Bertram, Newcastle University



BEST IMAGE PRIZE (SCIENTIFIC CATEGORY)

Image Title

Colourful murine knee

Description

 

20-week-old male STR/Ort mouse knee, synchrotron scanned at Diamond Light Source (MG28353-1), in coronal plane. Pixels more than one standard deviation away from mean greyscale values have been highlighted in ImageJ, and false colours applied in photoshop tinting bone (blue), marrow (orange), cartilage (green) and calcified cartilage (purple).

Submission Date

15.05.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Lucinda Evans, Royal Veterinary College, London and University of Brighton

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Mr Mark Hopkinson, Royal Veterinary College, London



RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE (SCIENTIFIC CATEGORY)

Image Title

Mice Embryo Tp53 Expression

Description

 

Mice embryo of E-13 day showing the expression of P53 in developing embryo. Embryos were retrieved from pregnant mice and immunoexpression of p53 was observed with respect to different stages of lungs development namely Pseudoglandular, Canalicular and Saccular. In this image, the lungs are in pseudoglandular stage of lungs development.

Submission Date

31.05.24

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Amna Mughal, Dow University of Health Sciences, Pakistan

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Professor. Dr. Mushtaq Hussain, Dow University of Health Sciences, Pakistan

 

BEST IMAGE PRIZE (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

mage Title

Optic Chasm

Description

 

Retinal axons in the optic chiasm and the optic tracts in an embryonic brain. The colours of the axons indicate regions of origins in the two retinas. Note that some axons cross and other don't, and the reordering of axons after the chiasm.

Submission Date

09.10.2023

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor William A. Harris
University of Cambridge

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

None



RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

Cephalopod Beak

Description

 

Series of rendered images illustrating cephalopod beak opening (top to bottom) and closing (bottom to top) sequence. Obtained from CT reconstruction which was furthered rendered in Autodesk Fusion 360

Submission Date

18.09.2023

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Erwin Pauws
University College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Mr Marius Didziokas
University College London

Dr Louise Souquet
University College London



BEST IMAGE PRIZE (SCIENTIFIC CATEGORY)

Image Title

Invading Vasculature

Description

 

During tooth development the vasculature (Red)  surrounds the forming tooth and starts to invade the dental papilla in response to Wnt signalling (Green). Image shows a confocal 3D Z-stack of a murine embryonic tooth germ (E14.5). Lef1-positive cells (Green) and CD31-positive endothelial cells (Red) shown by immunofluorescence. Nuclei DAPI (Blue)

Submission Date

27.10.2023

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor Abigail Tucker
King's College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Dr Hiba Asrar
King's College London



RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE (SCIENTIFIC CATEGORY)

Image Title

Computational tissue differentiation

Description

 

We developed a computational algorithm to stimulate the bone formation at sutures. This image briefly presents the procedures from initial skull reconstruction of a 3-month-age individual, to the development of baseline in silico, model, end with predicted model at 12-month-age by expansion of cranial cavities and  tissue differentiations at sutures.

Submission Date

26.10.2023

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Mr Ce Liang
University College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Mr Marius Didziokas
University College London

 

BEST IMAGE PRIZE (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

Whitetail Deer Skull

Description

 

This artwork displays the intricate details of the skull of a Whitetail Deer (Odocoileus virginianus), a native North American species of cultural and ecological significance. Created with charcoal and carbon dust on clay board, the image highlights osteology features unique to this important mammal.

Submission Date

16.05.23

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor Benjamin Crockett, North Central Michigan College, USA

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

N/A


RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE (ARTWORK CATEGORY)

Image Title

Arch of Aorta

Description

 

Painting on primed canvas with acrylics, inspired from CT angiography of head and neck; signifies the system of arteries supplying various parts of brain and spinal cord. The background symbolizes a black out in case of starvation. In a healthy individual, the nourishment provided is depicted as a glowing bulb.

Submission Date

30.05.23

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor Kalpana Ramachandran

Sri Ramachandra Medical College & Research Institute(SRMC & RI),

Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education and Research (SRIHER), Chennai, Tamilnadu, India

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Ms Nivedha Saravanan

Sri Ramachandra Medical College & Research Institute (SRMC & RI)

Sri Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education and Research (SRIHER), Chennai, Tamilnadu, India.

 


BEST IMAGE  PRIZE (SCIENTIFIC CATEGORY)

Image Title

3-D Mammary Macrophages

Description

 

A max projection from a 3-D Z stack of a pregnant ovine mammary gland, produced through confocal microscopy after CUBIC optical tissue clearing. Macrophages, stained with IBA-1 (magenta), are abundant in the gland and exhibit close associations with myoepithelial cells, stained with alpha-SMA (yellow). Nuclei are stained with DAPI (cyan).

Submission Date

26.05.23

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Mr Benjamin Davies, University of Cambridge

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Dr Kate Hughes, University of Cambridge


RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE (SCIENTIFIC CATEGORY)

Image Title

Super Resolution Astrocyte

Description

 

A >100-day old patient-derived astrocyte grown on neurotrophic proteins is shown here using a technique known as stimulated emission depletion (STED) which allows for enhanced resolution, overcoming the diffraction limit of light. Here nanoscale differences in F-actin (blue) structures can be observed, with enhanced micro-processes extension on the trophic proteins.

Submission Date

11.05.23

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Mr Cian O’Connor, Tissue Engineering Research Group, Dept of Anatomy & Regenerative Medicine, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Mr Massimiliano Garre, Super Resolution Imaging Consortium, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland

Ms Rena Mullally, Tissue Engineering Research Group, Dept of Anatomy & Regenerative Medicine, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland

JOINT BEST IMAGE PRIZE

Image Title

Somite rostrocaudal identity

Description

 

A 3D maximum projection of a whole mount chicken embryo at stage HH11 constructed from a confocal stack. Hybridization chain reaction shows Uncx4.1 (green) and EphA4 (magenta) alongside DAPI (cyan). This reveals the rostral (EphA4) and caudal (Uncx4.1) identity of cells in newly forming somites.

Submission Date

25/10/2022

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Mr Adam Moverley

University College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

Professor Claudio Stern

University College, London

 

Image Title

Anatomy of the heart

Description

 

Confocal images (40X objective) of the structure and vasculature of the heart from a 18-day old mouse. A tranverse section of the heart (thickness 8µm) is immunostained to visualise cell membranes (red), endothelial cells (green, here seen as yellow since green overlaps with red) and cell nuclei (blue).

Submission Date

27/10/22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Ms Nithya N. Nair

University of Edinburgh

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

N/A



JOINT RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE

Image Title

Mouse Embryonic Heart

Description

 

A 3D reconstruction and cross section of a mutant mouse heart collected at embryonic day (E) 15.5. Sections are produced using High Resolution Episcopic Microscopy (HREM) and processed by multiple image editing software that finally allows for accurate phenotypic analysis. This cross section shows a perimembranous ventricular septal defect.

Submission Date

28/10/22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Ms Aseel Abbad

University of Nottingham

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

Dr Siobhan Loughna

University of Nottingham

Professor David Brook

University of Nottingham

 

 

Image Title

Fossil salamander face on

Description

 

The skull of a new fossil salamander from the Middle Jurassic of Scotland in front view. The image was created following X-ray microCT scan of fossil blocks, segmentation of individual bones in Amira 6.0, and reorientation of individual bones in Blender 2.9. The eyes are to indicate orbit location.

Submission Date

31/10/22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Marc Jones

University College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

Professor Roger Benson

University of Oxford

Professor Susan Evans

University College London

 

 

Image Title

Hair Cell stereocilia

Description

 

SiR-actin labelling in stereocilial bundles from live auditory hair cells.

Submission Date

22/09/22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Zoe F. Mann

King’s College London

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

Dr James O’Sullivan

King’s College London

 

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title

Cell-extracellular matrix interactions

Description

 

Breast cancer cell engaging in cross-talk with collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix (ECM). This image taken by SEM of breast cancer cells cultured on collagen-based scaffolds, captures the extraordinary interactions between a breast cancer cell and its surrounding ECM which plays a major role in cancer progression.

Submission Date

25.05.22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Ms Elizabeth Sainsbury, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

N/A


JOINT RUNNER-UP PRIZE

Image Title

Anatomy of the Urinary System

Description

 

This digital artwork was created as a part of a self-directed project. Each image depicts the gross and microanatomy of the kidneys. I tried to create a unique style by combining traditional line drawing techniques with a hint of traditional Asian artwork.

Submission Date

30.05.22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Ms Daheen Lee

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

N/A

 

Image Title

Eustachian tube sighting

Description

 

Murine Eustachian Tube. Basal epithelial stem cells (Keratine 5 in green) give rise to two types of cells responsible for pathogens clearance from the middle ear. Goblets cells (plunc1 in white) produce mucines that are pushed towards the throat by Ciliated cells (acetylated tubuline in red). Nuclei in Blue (DAPI).

Submission Date

  20.05.22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Juan Manuel Fons Romero

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

N/A

 

Image Title

Lightning extracellular matrix

Description

 

The white lightning bolt-like strands you see connecting and surrounding collagen IV-expressing cells (blue) are depositions of an extracellular protein, fibronectin (white). Here we see its deposition by human meningeal fibroblasts as they are grown on top of human spinal cord astrocytes. Red= cell nuclei.

Submission Date

31.05.22

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Martyna Stasiewicz

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

N/A

FIRST PRIZE


Image Title

Horse Femur

Description

 

Graphite pencil and watercolour of a horse femur

Submission Date

07/10/21

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Fay Penrose, University of Liverpool, UK

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

N/A


RUNNER-UP PRIZE

Image Title

The Covid Safe Anatomy Lesson

Description

 

‘The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp’ (Rembrandt 1632) shows students studying cadaveric anatomy in the laboratory. Inspired by this painting’s composition, I created the ‘COVID-safe Anatomy Lesson’ in this acrylic on A3 canvas piece. My apologies to Rembrandt.

Submission Date

30/09/21

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor Ian Johnson, Macquarie University,Sydney, Australia

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s) and institution(s)

N/A

 

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title

Science in Bloom

Description

 

Pseudo-colorized scanning electron micrograph of the in vitro mineralised jellyfish collagen scaffold (Jellagen®Ltd). Owing to the highly porous structure of the scaffold, collagen fibres (PINK and GREEN) are randomly tangled in a flower-like shape, with mineral deposition (yellow) observed on the surface for enhanced osseointegration and new bone formation.

Submission Date

24/05/2021

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Miss Patricia Medesan, Doctoral Fellow in Anatomical/Biomedical Sciences, Paxton Laboratory, Edinburgh Medical School, UK

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Dr Jennifer Z. Paxton, Senior Lecturer in Anatomy, Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences, Edinburgh Medical School, UK

Professor  Andrew Mearns-Spragg, Jellagen® Ltd, Cardiff, UK


RUNNER-UP PRIZE

Image Title

Dissection of Experience

Description

As an artist with a fascination for Anatomy, I am privileged to have the opportunity to carry out cadaveric dissections. This oil painting (120cm x 120cm) is my subjective response to that necessarily objective experience. The intention is to challenge what I see as the tenuous art - science distinction.

Submission Date

20/05/21

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Jac Saorsa

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

None

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title

Trigeminal Nerve

Description

 

Illustration of the right eye showing the ophthalmic and maxillary divisions of the trigeminal nerve. Drawn by hand using pencil with computer colour rendering. Completed for research on the disease of syphilis.

Submission Date

31/10/20

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Ms Lydia Carline

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

N/A

 

RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE PRIZE

Image Title

Tissue Scaffold Neurosphere

Description

 

A maximum image projection of a differentiating induced pluripotent stem cell derived neurosphere cultured in a 3D porous, soft hyaluronic acid tissue scaffold in vitro. Astrocytes (pink) coalesce at the core driving intrinsic signalling while differentiating neurons (yellow) are found at the periphery. Imaged using a Zeiss Examiner.Z1 confocal microscope.

Submission Date

29/10/2020

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Adrian Dervan - Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland & Advanced Materials and Bioengineering Research Centre (AMBER)

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Mr Cian O’ Connor – Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland & Advanced Materials and Bioengineering Research Centre (AMBER)

Professor Fergal O’Brien - Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland & Advanced Materials and Bioengineering Research Centre (AMBER)

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title

Skate skeletal preparation

Description

 

In this skeletal preparation of a little skate (Leucoraja erinacea) hatchling, cartilage and mineralised tissues are stained with Alcian Blue and Alizarin Red, respectively. Cartilaginous fishes, like the skate, do not form bone, but instead reinforce their skeleton with tiny superficial tiles of calcified cartilage called “tesserae”.

Submission Date

30 May 2020

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Andrew Gillis

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

N/A

 

RUNNER-UP PRIZE

Image Title

Tooth root kaleidoscope

Description

 

Confocal image of the root of a tooth showing in green the expression of the putative stem cell marker Thy1. The image has been mirrored and flipped to give the impression of a kaleidoscope.

Submission Date

27/05/2020

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Abigail Tucker

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Rupali Lav

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title

Developing Zebrafish Heart

Description

 

Live light sheet images of the heart and connecting vasculature of a 3-day old zebrafish embryo. Tissue-specific transgenic lines allow visualisation of actin in the myocardial (green) and endocardial (magenta) cells of the heart, providing highly detailed 3D reconstructions of cardiac morphogenesis.

Submission Date

29.10.19

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Emily Noël, University of Sheffield

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Ms Juliana Sanchez Posada

 

JOINT RUNNER-UP

Image Title

Osteocyte lacunae

 

Description

 

High-resolution µCT data was collected at the Diamond Light Source synchrotron to visualise the internal structure of human orthotopic (left) and heterotopic (right) bone. This 3D volumetric render illustrates the morphological comparability of osteocyte lacunae (in green) across bone types. Bone surfaces (including Haversian canal walls) are shown in brown.

Submission Date

31st October, 2019

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author (s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Crispin Wiles, University of Warwick

Name(s) of Other submitting author (s) and Institution(s)

None

 

 

JOINT RUNNER-UP

Image Title

 

Middle ear apparatus

Description

 

Composite photomicrograph of the left middle ear apparatus of a chinchilla. Careful dissection has revealed the tensor tympani muscle (centre left): its tendon crosses the middle ear cavity to insert on the manubrium of the malleus. The head of the stapes is visible in the background.

 

Submission Date

31.10.19

 

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author (s) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Matthew J. Mason

University of Cambridge, Department of Physiology, Development & Neuroscience

 

Name(s) of Other submitting author (s) and institution(s)

None

 


Cerebellar slice culture

Image Title

(3 words max.)

 

Cerebellar slice culture

Description

(50 words max.)

This confocal image depicts a mouse cerebellar slice culture immunostained with the neuronal marker Calbindin (red) and myelin (white). Image was captured using a Zeiss LSM710 confocal microscope (Zeiss, Germany) and 10x objective.

 

Submission Date

 

23/05/2019

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

 

Dr Francesca Pieropan

 

University of Portsmouth

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Dr Andrea D. Rivera

 

University of Portsmouth


RUNNER-UP


Warhol retinal clusters

Image Title

(3 words max.)

 

Warhol retinal clusters

 

Description

(50 words max.)

We recently discovered transient cholinergic cell clusters forming an annulus around the optic disc in the neonatal mouse retina. These images illustrate the clusters (ChAT immunostaining) in a retinal wholemount (postnatal day 5) with ganglion cells (RBPMS immunostaining) in the background in various colour combinations inspired by Andy Warhol’s paintings.

Submission Date

31 May 2019

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Professor Evelyne Sernagor

Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Jean de Montigny

Dr Vidhyasankar Krishnamoorthy

Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University

 

FIRST PRIZE

Reconstructing Gigantic Dormouse

Image Title

 

Reconstructing Gigantic Dormouse

Description

 

A 3D-model of one of the best-preserved skulls of the gigantic extinct Sicilian dormouse, Leithia melitensis, is created using photogrammetry. The missing cranial features, including the nasal bone, the incisors and the zygomatic arch, are reconstructed using a warped microCT of a smaller but closely related extant dormouse Eliomys quercinus from Sicily.

Submission Date

11.10.18

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Mr Jesse James Hennekam
Hull York Medical School

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

None 

 

JOINT RUNNER-UP

Lonely Cortical Neuron

 

Image Title

Lonely Cortical Neuron

Description

 

A mouse pyramidal neuron marked by expression of tomato-DsRed. The neurons, detectedfollowingan elegant lineagetracing paradigm,reside in LayersII/III amongst existing cortical neurons, marked by NeuN immunolabelling, and Hoescht to detect nuclei. Imaged as a Z stack with a Zeiss Axiogimager M2 withapotome attachment.

Submission Date

12.10.18

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Miss Hannah Louisa Felstead (School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia)

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

Dr. Mohammad K. Hajihosseini (School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia)

 

Bearded seal maxilloturbinates

Image Title

 

Bearded seal maxilloturbinates

 

Description

 

Micro-CT image of the nasal cavity of a bearded seal, showing a superimposed section of its extraordinarily complex maxilloturbinate bones. Owing to inevitably limited scan resolution, isolating the extremely thin turbinates as evenly as this, across the whole cavity, required considerable image processing and manual work.

Submission Date

2.10.18

Name(s) of LEAD submitting author(s ) who must be members of the Anatomical Society and institution(s)

Dr Matthew James Mason, University of Cambridge

 

Name(s) of Other submitting author(s ) and institution(s)

1) Léa Wenger, University of Cambridge

2) Øyvind Hammer, Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Norway

3) Arnoldus Schytte Blix, Department of Arctic and Marine Biology, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title: Retina Alpha

Description
: This mouse retinal wholemount was reconstructed using a Zeiss AxioImager with Apotome mode. Large alpha ganglion cells were labelled with the antibody SMI-32 (cyan to white). This antibody is raised against mouse, and therefore it labels blood vessels as well. Hoechst was used to label all cell bodies (DNA) (red).

Lead Submitting Author:
 Prof Evelyne Sernagor, Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University.

Other Submitting Author (s):Dr Gerrit Hilgen and Ms Viktoriia Kartysh, Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University.

Submitted on: 31 May 2018.

RUNNER-UP

Image Title: The Arbor Vitae of the murine cerebellum

Description: The image depicts a Sagittal section of a murine cerebellum cultured ex-vivo for 10 days. Myelin (Green) is shown decorating the Arbor Vitae of the Cerebellum where Oligodendrocytes (Red) are located. Oligodendrocytes produce myelin throughout life. Image was obtained by collating a series of photomicrographs using a Zeiss LSM710 confocal microscope (Zeiss, Germany) and Plan-NEOFLUAR 5 objectives. Images were collated and postprocessed using ZenLite suite 2012 (Zeiss) and Adobe Photoshop 2017 (Adobe).

Lead Submitting Author(s):
 Dr Francesca Pieropan and Dr Andrea D Rivera, Institute of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, University of Portsmouth, UK.

Submitted on: 31 May 2018.

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title:

Zebrafish lateral line

Description:

5-day-old zebrafish larva stained with DAPI to label nuclei (blue), phalloidin to visualize F-actin (green) and Myosin7a to stain mechanosensory hair cells (red). Zebrafish sense water motion through hair cells (red) in neuromasts in the lateral line along the body and all over the head.

Lead Submitting Author

Professor Andrea Streit, King’s College London

 

Other Submitting Author:

Ms Alice Gervasoni, King's College London

Submitted on:

04 October 2017

 

 

RUNNER-UP PRIZE

Image Title:

Auditory Hair Cells

Description:

P8 mouse cochlea stained with DAPI to label cell nuclei (blue), phalloidin (green) to visualize F-actin and Myosin7a (red) to stain mechanosensory hair cells. Mammals detect sounds through an array of sensory receptors called hair cells (red) characterized by stereocilia (green) on their apical surface.

Lead Submitting Author:

Professor Andrea Streit, King’s College London

Other Submitting Author:

Ms Alice Gervasoni, King's College London

Submitted on:

04 October 2017

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title:

Tuatara skeleton

 

Description:

 

This is a preserved tuatara that has been imaged using X-ray microtomography. In addition to the skeleton, scleral ossicles, tiny sesamoid bones, and eggs within the abdomen can be seen. This was one of several rare and historically valuable tuatara specimens to be scanned and made freely available athttps://osf.io/bds35/.

 

Lead Submitting Author

 

Sophie Regnault (Structure and Motion Lab, Royal Veterinary College)

 

 

Submitted on:

1 February 2017

 

 

 

RUNNER-UP PRIZE

Image Title:

Chick inner ear

Description:

 

A micro-CT reconstructed image of a 10-day-old chick embryo with the inner ear structures. The semicircular canals, vestibule and cochlea are highlighted in green

 

Lead Submitting Author:

 

 

Nobue Itasaki, University of Bristol

Submitted on:

21 April 2017

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title:

Myelination in the Corpus Callosum

Description:

The image depicts Myelin (Cyan) and Oligodendrocytes Precursor Cells (OPCs, Red) jn Corpus Callosum of a mouse brain aged Postnatal day (P) 8. Images were captured using a Zeiss LSM710 confocal microscope (Zeiss, Germany) and Plan-NEOFLUAR 20 objectives with a numerical aperture of 0.50.

Lead Submitting Author

Andrea D. Rivera,University of Portsmouth

 

Submitted on:

29 October 2016

 

 

 

RUNNER-UP

Image Title:

Image Title:Human Fetal Forebrain

Description:

Description:Sagittal section of 8 post-conception week human early fetal brain (obtained fromwww.hdbr.org) stained by double label immunofluorescence for the cell division marker KI67 (green) andthe transcription factor COUPTFII (red). The combination highlights (yellow) regionalisation of COUPTFII-expressing dividing cells to the caudal ganglionic eminence.

Lead Submitting Author:

Ayman Alzu’bi, Newcastle University

 

Submitted on:

8 September 2016

AS BEST IMAGE AWARD 2016 (31.05.16)

Image Title:

3D Mouse Forelimb

Description:

3D anatomy of an embryonic day (E) 16.5 mouse forelimb produced by optical projection tomography (OPT). The merged image shows muscle (red) stained with an antibody against muscle myosin (My32). Tendons (green) are labelled using a ScxGFP reporter. Autofluorescence (grey) provides an outline of all limb structures.

Submitted by Lead Author (Member AS):

 

Professor Malcolm Logan
Randall Division, King’s College London

Submitted by Other Author:

 

Dr Susan Miller

Randall Division, King’s College London

Submitted on:

26 April 2016

 

AS RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE AWARD 2016 (31.05.16)

Image Title:

Peek-a-boo

Description:

This is an Old World fruit bat embryo collected in 1972 at Ife University, Nigeria. The specimen has recently been processed for histological sectioning to investigate the process of tooth replacement, showing an example of archival tissue being used in modern day science. Image obtained with a Leica MZFLIII stereoscope.

Submitted by Lead Author (Member AS)

Dr Neal Anthwal

King’s College, London

 

Submitted byOther Author(s)

Ms Elena Popa
Kings College London

Submitted on:

31 May 2016

BEST IMAGE AWARD 2015 (31.10.15) AWARDED TO DR SUSAN CHAPMAN BY THE AS WEBSITE OFFICER

Image Title: Full Frontal Face

Description: A frontal section of an embryonic day 6 chicken head, showing the inner and middle ear, 2nd pharyngeal arches and tongue. Peanut Agglutinin Lectin (red), Sambucus nigra (green) and Wheat Germ Agglutinin (purple) fluorescently label neural tube, cartilage matrix, endothelial cells and epithelia. Lectin staining differentiates between cartilage elements.

Submitted by: Dr Susan C. Chapman, Clemson University

Submitted on: 13 October 2015

AS RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE AWARD 2015 (31.10.15) AWARDED TO STEPHANE BERNEAU BY THE AS WEBSITE OFFICER

Image Title: In-vitro embryo invasion

Description: Fluorescent image of an advanced in vitro mouse embryo attachment site exhibiting embryo outgrowth into human endometrial Ishikawa cells to detect OPN receptor, CD44, in green.Endometrial CD44 plays a role in embryo attachment and its localisation remains unchanged at embryo invasion site.Blue: Cell nuclei staining. Red: Actin cytoskeleton.

Submitted by: Stéphane Berneau, University of Manchester, Institute of Human Development, Maternal and Fetal Health Research Group

Submitted on: 31 October 2015

AS BEST IMAGE AWARD 2015 (31.05.15)

Image Title: L1 vertebral trabeculae

Description: A sphere digitally cut from a 2.5-year old human L1 vertebral centrum and coloured to highlight variation in trabecular thickness. It was created from microCT data using VGStudio and Drishti, for an ongoing project comparing the ontogeny of vertebral trabeculae in modern humans and Neanderthals.

Submitted by: Crispin Wiles

Submitted on: 31 May 2015

AS RUNNER-UP BEST IMAGE AWARD 2015 (31.05.15)

Image Title: Peeling octopus sucker

Description: A sucker of Octopus vulgaris analysed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was captured shedding its skin. A Cambridge Stereoscan360 (Image Access, V.3) was used for acquisition; Adobe Photoshop for pseudocolouring (sucker, green; shedding skin, yellow). This micrograph of the normal shedding process reveals the sophisticated nature of the octopus skin’s interdigitations (comparable to rete ridges in human epidermis).

Submitted by: Tanya Shaw

Submitted on: 31 May 2015

AS BEST IMAGE AWARD 2014 (31.10.14)

Image Title: Gecko ‘Chromocranium’

Description: 3D rendering of a gecko skull (Nephrurus levis) from micro-computed tomography (21 um/voxel). Colour corresponds to ambient occlusion (i.e. red surfaces are most visible, blue surfaces least visible). Steep colour gradients highlight foramina. Hidden structures (e.g. bony labyrinth, nasal cavity) can be extracted automatically based on their high occlusion.

Submitted by: Mr James Turbett

Submitted on: 30 October 2014

AS RUNNER UP BEST IMAGE AWARD 2014 (31.10.14)

Image Title: The Mummy's Return

Description: A 15th century Peruvian mummy in a sealed glass-bell underwent forensic "phenotyping". Central to this study, a set of CT 
scans led to subsequent advanced analysis, 3D-renderings and full body/face reconstructions, which together provided critical information 
about the gender, age, condition and other aspects of the person prior to her death.

Submitted by: Professor Luc Bidaut

Submitted on: 28 October 2014

AS BEST IMAGE AWARD 2014 (deadline 31.05.14)

Image Title: Spinal astrocytes

Description: Image shows the morphology of rodent spinal astrocytes, which play an important role in numerous functions in the central nervous system. Vimentin (green) demarcates the cytoskeletal structure, illustrating the extensive processes of these cells and dapi (blue) shows the nucleus. The image was captured using a Zeiss LSM710 Confocal microscope.

Submitted by: Dr Ada Delaney

Submitted on: 14th May 2014

AS RUNNER UP BEST IMAGE AWARD 2014 (deadline 31.05.14)

Image Title: Dil Mouse Embryo

Description: Mouse embryo at embryonic stage E12.5 labeled with DiI, a plasma membrane marker which was incorporated in the entire epithelial surface. By tracing cell movements, key roles of tissue interactions in many aspects of embryonic morphogenesis can be investigated, contributing to the developmental biology knowledge. 

Submitted by: Ms Lemonia Chatzeli, Ms Tathyane Harumi Nakajima Teshima and Dr Marcia Gaete

Submitted: 15th May 2014

FIRST PRIZE

Image Title: Neurospheres

Description:  Enteric neurospheres, generated from Wnt-1Cre;R26YFP mouse gut. Wnt-1 positive neural crest cells express YFP (green). The neurospheres are stained with dapi (blue) and immunolabelled with (from top to bottom in red) p75, TuJ1, GFAP, and Sox10. These immunomarkers confirm that gut neurospheres contain neural crest-derived cells, neurons, glia and ENS stem cells.

Submitted by: Dr Alan Burns and Dr Ellen Binder. 

Submitted on: 25 October 2013

JOINT RUNNER-UP PRIZE

Image Title: Enhanced Tractography

Description: Axial diffusion-weighted MRI tractography image of living human brain. Nerve fibre colour represents movement of water.  Lateral diffusivity: red/orange; anterior-posterior: green; inferior-superior: blue. Acquired on Discovery MR750w 3.0T by GE Healthcare. Enhanced by Ben Crossman. Image to be used as cover of 5th edition of Neuroanatomy (Crossman and Neary; Elsevier).

Copyright statement: The original image was provided to me by GE Healthcare specifically for use as the basis of an illustration for my use. The image was manipulated and enhanced by Ben Crossman and will be used as a book cover illustration by Elsevier Ltd. Elsevier own the copyright to the submitted image. I have obtained specific consent from Elsevier to submit the image for this competition and GE Healthcare are also fully supportive.

Submitted by: Professor Emeritus Alan Crossman and Mr Ben Crossman.

Submitted on: 28 October 2013

JOINT RUNNER UP PRIZE

Image Title: “The Pilgrims”

Description: This pseudo-coloured SEM micrograph shows sensillae located on the in the inner curvature of the forcipular apparatus of the House Centipede - Scutigera coleoptrata.  The forciples have evolved from walking legs into pincer-like structures containing a complex venom gland and duct system; the sensillae aid in prey detection and capture. 

Submitted by: Mr Alexander Black and Dr Michel Dugon.

Submitted on: 30 October 2013

Joint winners were Dr Janelle Pakan (University College Cork) and Dr Abigail Tucker (King's College London) - images below

Oligodendrocyte

Title: Oligodendrocyte

Description: An oligodendrocyte (blue) extends to form myelin sheaths (green) to encase Purkinje cell axons (red) in the developing rat cerebellum.  The image shows a projected confocal z-stack from a 250µm cerebellar slice where cellular elements were visualized using immunohistochemistry. Olig2 (an oligodendrocyte specific transcription factor) demarcates the oligodendrocyte nucleus shown in blue, myelin basic protein expression in the oligodendrocyte is shown in green, and neurofilaments within Purkinje cell axons are shown in red.

Submitted by: Dr Janelle Pakan, Post-Doctoral Fellow, UCC, Dept of Anatomy and Neuroscience, Dr. Kieran McDermott Laboratory, Ireland.

Middle Ear Mucosa

Title: Middle Ear Mucosa

Description: SEM of a mouse middle ear mucosa. The mucosa is covered in a lawn of ciliated cells that help to clear the middle ear cavity. Red blood cells pseudocoloured in red. 

Submitted by: Dr Abigail Tucker, Reader in Craniofacial Development and Orthodontics, King’s College, London.

Winners - May 2012

Joint winners were Dr Oran Kennedy (City College of New York) and Dr Kieran McDermott (University College Cork) - images below

IMAGE REMOVED BY REQUEST OF AUTHOR

Title: Osteonal Vascular Junction

Description: Image taken from a cross-section of Villanueva stained cortical bone. It shows an osteonal Haversian canal, with a Volkmans canal emanating from each side. Interestingly the osteon is undergoing mineralization (stained red) and its osteocyte lacunae and, of particular interest, their canaliculi can be clearly seen. Image was acquired using a Zeiss-Apotome Optical Sectioning system.

Submitted by: Dr Oran Kennedy 

 

Embryonic Spinal Cord

Title: Embryonic Spinal Cord

Description: Confocal image of nestin (red) positive radial neuroepithelial cells dorsally and co-localized nestin (red) and BLBP (green) positive radial glial cells ventrally in an 40 micron transverse section of the E14 rat spinal cord. Cell nuclei are labelled with bisbenzimide (blue).

Submitted by: Dr Kieran McDermott

Joint Winners October 2011: Mr. Daniel Tams (University of Durham) and Dr. Jon Colinson (University of Aberdeen) - images below

Runner Up October 2011: Dr Hajihosseini (University of East Anglia)

Mr. Daniel Tams, University of Durham "Neurosphere"

Mr. Daniel Tams, University of Durham "Neurosphere"

Description: Differentiation and neural induction of human pluripotent stem cells by the novel synthetic retinoid AH61. After 21 days differentiation neurospheres were induced to form long neuritis on laminin/PDL coated tissue culture plastic. Differentiation by the synthetic retinoid AH61 an subsequent neurite outgrowth was highly reproducible and represents a model of human neural development and neurite outgrowth for use in developmental and disease modelling studies. Scale=250µm

Dr. Jon Colinson, University of Aberdeen "E16.5 paw muscle"

Dr. Jon Colinson, University of Aberdeen "E16.5 paw muscle"

Description: Whole mount immunohistochemistry to visualise skeletal muscle myosin in the developing ventral pad of the E16.5 mouse paw. The beautiful complexity of the muscle arrangement is demonstrated in situ.