A research team used an instrument called a CTD rosette to collect water samples during a 2,500-mile research cruise from Hawaii to Samoa. In a newly published study, they demonstrated the emerging technique of proteomics as a powerful new tool to reveal how marine microbes adapt their biochemically machinery to shifting environmental conditions. (Brian Dimento, University of Connecticut)

A research team used an instrument called a CTD rosette to collect water samples during a 2,500-mile research cruise from Hawaii to Samoa. In a newly published study, they demonstrated the emerging technique of proteomics as a powerful new tool to reveal how marine microbes adapt their biochemically machinery to shifting environmental conditions. (Brian Dimento, University of Connecticut)