Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Bulgarian researchers create new method for tracking chromosomes

Photo: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

Bulgarian young researchers have made an impressive scientific discovery in the field of cell biology. A Bulgarian team has published a scientific paper in which they track human chromosomes during mitosis, which was previously considered impossible. 

The scientific paper, titled “Supra-second tracking and live-cell karyotyping reveal principles of mitotic chromosome dynamics,” has not only attracted the attention of one of the most renowned and influential journals, Nature Cell Biology, but has also been featured on the cover of the journal, the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and the Ministry of Education announced.

The new method, called FAST CHIMP (Facilitated Segmentation and Tracking of Chromosomes in Mitosis Pipeline), uses a combination of super-resolution microscopy and deep machine tracking, providing unprecedented accuracy in monitoring rapidly rearranging chromosomes in real time.

The first author of the article is the doctoral student Rumen Stamatov, who graduated with a master's degree from Duke University and a bachelor's degree from the University of Pennsylvania. The scientific supervisor is Assoc. Prof. Stoyno Stoynov. The project involves postdoctoral student Sonya Uzunova from the Institute of Molecular Biology and students from Sofia University Ioana Kicheva, Tavian Blagoev and Maria Karaboeva.



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

57,000 pensioners continue to work in the state sector

225,788 Bulgarians with pension for length of service and age continue to work in order to earn additional income. If people with other types of pensions are added to them, their total number exceeds 350,000 people or over 17.5..

published on 8/4/25 11:56 AM
Rumen Draganov

Adopting the euro will not make tourism more expensive, it will even reduce some prices

Bulgaria's entry into the eurozone on January 1, 2026 will not make vacations more expensive. This is what Rumen Draganov, director of the Institute for Analysis and Forecasts in Tourism told the Bulgarian National Radio. The prices..

published on 8/4/25 11:14 AM

Parliament calls for equal treatment of the Black Sea region in the EU cohesion policy

The Bulgarian Parliament, pointing out the key importance of the EU cohesion policy for the economic development of the regions in Bulgaria, insists that the Black Sea region receives equal recognition to the regions in the EU..

published on 8/4/25 9:23 AM