The pictures by University of Manchester researchers show how the cells, which are responsible for fighting infections and cancer in the human body, change the organisation of their surface molecules, when activated by a type of protein found on viral-infected or tumour cells.
Professor Daniel Davis, who led the investigation into the immune cells said the work could provide important clues for tackling disease.
The research found the proteins at the surface of immune cells are not evenly spaced but grouped in clusters - a bit like stars bunched together in galaxies.
"The surprising thing was that these new pictures revealed that immune cell surfaces alter at this scale - the nano scale - which could perhaps change their ability to be activated in a subsequent encounter with a diseased cell," Davis said.
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"We have shown that immune cells are not evenly distributed as once thought, but instead they are grouped in very small clumps - a bit like if you were an astronomer looking at clusters of stars in the Universe and you would notice that they were grouped in clusters.
The team used high quality, super-resolution fluorescence microscopy to view the cells in blood samples in their laboratory to create the still images published in the journal Science Signalling.