Results 271 to 280 of about 2,959,069 (338)
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Cellular Adhesion Molecules

Transfusion Medicine Reviews, 1994
NORMAL hematopoiesis in adult humans occurs within the bone marrow (BM) in the milleu of the marrow microenvironment. l Cellular,2 cytokine,3,4 and extracellular matrix (ECM)5 interactions facilitate normal proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor cells.
H, Uchiyama, K C, Anderson
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Cellular adhesion to collagen

Experimental Cell Research, 1978
Abstract BALB/3T3 cells were released from tissue culture plates with EGTA, and their rates of attachment to collagen gels polymerized on Millipore filters; were measured. Cell attachment in serum-free medium was 20–50% of that which occurred in medium containing 10% fetal calf serum (FCS).
T F, Linsenmayer   +3 more
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Studies of cellular adhesiveness

Experimental Cell Research, 1960
Abstract 1. 1. A simple technique based on the centrifugation of cells adhering to glass has been developed which permits the quantitative evaluation of the adhesiveness of different types of cells to glass, and the effect of various reagents on this adhesiveness. 2. 2. The effect of various enzymes on the adhesiveness of washed mouse ascites
G C, EASTY, D M, EASTY, E J, AMBROSE
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Leucocyte cellular adhesion molecules

Blood Reviews, 1990
Leucocytes express adhesion promoting receptors which mediate cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. These adhesive interactions are crucial to the regulation of haemopoiesis and thymocyte maturation, the direction and control of leucocyte traffic and migration through tissues, and in the development of immune and non-immune inflammatory responses ...
K, Yong, A, Khwaja
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Modulating cellular adhesion through nanotopography

Biomaterials, 2010
Cellular adhesion is a fundamental process in the development of scaffolds for tissue engineering; in the design of biosensors and in preparing antibacterial substrates. A theoretical model is presented for predicting the strength of cellular adhesion to originally inert surfaces as a function of the substrate topography, accounting for both specific ...
Paolo, Decuzzi, Mauro, Ferrari
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Polymer microarrays for cellular adhesion

Chemical Communications, 2006
Microarray screening of polymer libraries for cellular adhesion was developed utilising a thin film of agarose to allow unsurpassed localisation of cell binding onto the array substrate and the discovery of cell specific polymers.
Guilhem, Tourniaire   +6 more
openaire   +2 more sources

THERMODYNAMIC STUDIES OF CELLULAR ADHESION

ASAIO Journal, 1979
Cellular adhesion of granulocytes and of platelets to solid substrates of different surface tensions has been studied from a thermodynamic aspect. A simple thermodynamic model predicts that cellular adhesion should increase as the surface tension of the solid substrate increases provided that the surface tension of the liquid medium in which the cells ...
D R, Absolom   +3 more
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Adhesions: the cellular science

Hospital Medicine, 2004
Failure of fibrinolysis of the inflammatory fibrin exudate which appears following peritoneal trauma allows fibroblast in-growth and neovascularization of the fibrinous adhesion to develop a fibrous adhesion.
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Cellular adhesion molecules on periodontal lymphocytes

Australian Dental Journal, 1995
AbstractT cell induced differentiation of B cells has been shown to be dependent on the CD2/LFA‐3 and LFA‐1/ICAM‐1 pathways. Flow cytometric analysis was used to examine these adhesion molecules on T and B cells extracted from gingival tissues before and after stimulation with the putative periodon‐topathic bacteria, Porphyromonas gingivalis and ...
Gemmell E., Sved A.M., Seymour G.J.
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