Embryonic fibroblast motility and orientation can be influenced by physiological electric fields
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] C. Stern. Behaviour and motility of cultured chick mesoderm cells in steady electrical fields. , 1981, Experimental cell research.
[2] M. Poo,et al. Electrophoretic movement and localization of acetylcholine receptors in the embryonic muscle cell membrane , 1978, Nature.
[3] J. W. Vanable,et al. The glabrous epidermis of cavies contains a powerful battery. , 1982, The American journal of physiology.
[4] R. Nuccitelli,et al. Electrical controls of development. , 1977, Annual review of biophysics and bioengineering.
[5] P. Weiss. In vitro experiments on the factors determining the course of the outgrowing nerve fiber , 1934 .
[6] W. T. Chen. Induction of spreading during fibroblast movement , 1979, The Journal of cell biology.
[7] Herman P. Schwan,et al. Electric Characteristics of Tissues , 1963 .
[8] L. Jaffe. Electrophoresis along cell membranes , 1977, Nature.
[9] R B Borgens,et al. Bioelectricity and regeneration: large currents leave the stumps of regenerating newt limbs. , 1977, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[10] G. Nicolson,et al. The cell surface in animal embryogenesis and development , 1979 .
[11] C. McCaig,et al. The ontogeny of the transepidermal potential difference in frog embryos. , 1982, Developmental biology.
[12] M. Poo,et al. Electrophoresis of concanavalin A receptors along embryonic muscle cell membrane , 1977, Nature.
[13] M. Poo. In situ electrophoresis of membrane components. , 1981, Annual review of biophysics and bioengineering.
[14] L. Jaffe,et al. Neurites grow faster towards the cathode than the anode in a steady field. , 1979, The Journal of experimental zoology.
[15] L. Jaffe,et al. Strong electrical currents leave the primitive streak of chick embryos. , 1979, Science.
[16] P. Armstrong. Time‐lapse cinemicrographic studies of cell motility during morphogenesis of the embryonic yolk sac of Fundulus heteroclitus (Pisces: Teleosti) , 1980, Journal of morphology.
[17] J. Löfberg,et al. Neural crest cell migration in relation to extracellular matrix organization in the embryonic axolotl trunk. , 1980, Developmental biology.
[18] H. B. Goodrich. CELL BEHAVIOR IN TISSUE CULTURES , 1924 .
[19] W. Montagna,et al. The Structure and Function of the Epidermis , 1961 .
[20] J. Curray,et al. The Analysis of Two-Dimensional Orientation Data , 1956, The Journal of Geology.
[21] W. T. Chen,et al. Rapid cellular translocation is related to close contacts formed between various cultured cells and their substrata. , 1982, Journal of cell science.
[22] R. Meech,et al. Calcium-dependent potassium activation in nervous tissues. , 1978, Annual review of biophysics and bioengineering.
[23] C. McCaig,et al. The direction of growth of differentiating neurones and myoblasts from frog embryos in an applied electric field. , 1981, The Journal of physiology.
[24] P. W. Luther,et al. Changes in cell shape and actin distribution induced by constant electric fields , 1983, Nature.
[25] R. Nuccitelli,et al. Embryonic cell motility can be guided by physiological electric fields. , 1983, Experimental cell research.
[26] M. Poo,et al. Orientation of neurite growth by extracellular electric fields , 1982, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[27] J. D. Feldman,et al. Directional protrusive pseudopodial activity and motility in macrophages induced by extracellular electric fields. , 1982, Cell motility.