Search results for "Cell Movement"

showing 10 items of 396 documents

Folic acid-functionalized graphene oxide nanosheets via plasma etching as a platform to combine NIR anticancer phototherapy and targeted drug deliver…

2020

PEGylated graphene oxide (GO) has shown potential as NIR converting agent to produce local heat useful in breast cancer therapy, since its suitable photothermal conversion, high stability in physiological fluids, biocompatibility and huge specific surface. GO is an appealing nanomaterial for potential clinical applications combining drug delivery and photothermal therapy in a single nano-device capable of specifically targeting breast cancer cells. However, native GO sheets have large dimensions (0.5-5 mu m) such that tumor accumulation after a systemic administration is usually precluded. Herein, we report a step-by-step synthesis of folic acid-functionalized PEGylated GO, henceforth named…

Materials scienceBiocompatibilityPlasma GasesCell SurvivalInfrared RaysBioengineeringNanotechnologyAntineoplastic Agents02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistrySettore CHIM/04 - Chimica Industriale01 natural sciencesNANOMEDICINECell LinePolyethylene GlycolsBiomaterialsBreast cancerBreast cancerFolic AcidCell MovementmedicineNANOPARTICLESABLATIONHumansDoxorubicinCANCER-CELLSAGENTSGraphene oxideDrug Carrierstechnology industry and agriculturePhotothermal therapyPhototherapy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologymedicine.disease0104 chemical sciencesNanostructuresDrug LiberationTargeted drug deliverySettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoMechanics of MaterialsDoxorubicinCancer cellDrug deliveryDoxorubicin HydrochlorideGraphiteSettore CHIM/07 - Fondamenti Chimici Delle Tecnologie0210 nano-technologySYSTEMmedicine.drugMaterials scienceengineering. C, Materials for biological applications
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Scaffolds based on hyaluronan crosslinked with a polyaminoacid: Novel candidates for tissue engineering application

2008

New porous scaffolds, with a suitable hydrolytic and enzymatic degradation, useful for tissue engineering applications have been obtained by a carbodiimide mediated reaction between hyaluronan (HA) and a synthetic polymer with a polyaminoacid structure such as α,β-polyaspartylhydrazide (PAHy). Scaffolds with a different molar ratio between PAHy repeating units and HA repeating units have been prepared and characterized from a chemical and physicochemical point of view. Tests of indirect and direct cytotoxicity, cell adhesion, and spreading on these biomaterials have been performed by using murine L929 fibroblasts. The new biomaterials showed a good cell compatibility and ability to allow ce…

Materials scienceCompressive StrengthPolymersBiomedical EngineeringBiomaterialshyaluronanb-polyaspartylhydrazidechemistry.chemical_compoundMiceTissue engineeringMolar ratioCell MovementMaterials TestingCell AdhesionAnimalsHyaluronic AcidCytotoxicityCell adhesionCells CulturedCarbodiimideTissue EngineeringTissue Scaffoldstissue engineering hyaluronic acid chemical crosslinking composite scaffold polyasparthylhydrazideMetals and AlloysCell migrationchemical crosslinkinghyaluronan; a; b-polyaspartylhydrazide; chemical crosslinking; composite scaffolds; tissue engineeringSynthetic polymerPorous scaffoldchemistryChemical engineeringaCeramics and Compositescomposite scaffoldsPeptidesBiomedical engineering
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Survival and differentiation of embryonic neural explants on different biomaterials

2006

Biomaterials prepared from polyacrylamide, ethyl acrylate (EA), and hydroxyethyl acrylate (HEA) in various blend ratios, methyl acrylate and chitosan, were tested in vitro as culture substrates and compared for their ability to be colonized by the cells migrating from embryonic brain explants. Neural explants were isolated from proliferative areas of the medial ganglionic eminence and the cortical ventricular zone of embryonic rat brains and cultured in vitro on the different biomaterials. Chitosan, poly(methyl acrylate), and the 50% wt copolymer of EA and HEA were the most suitable substrates to promote cell attachment and differentiation of the neural cells among those tested. Immunofluor…

Materials scienceGanglionic eminenceBiocompatibilityCellular differentiationBiomedical EngineeringBiocompatible MaterialsIn Vitro TechniquesBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundCell MovementMaterials TestingAnimalsNerve TissueProgenitor cellMethyl acrylateStem CellsMetals and AlloysBiomaterialCell DifferentiationEmbryonic stem cellRatsCell biologychemistryCeramics and CompositesEthyl acrylateBiomedical engineeringJournal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A
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Toxicity of gold-nanoparticles: Synergistic effects of shape and surface functionalization on micromotility of epithelial cells

2010

Nanoparticle exposure is monitored by a combination of two label-free and non-invasive biosensor devices which detect cellular shape and viscoelasticity (quartz crystal microbalance), cell motility and the dynamics of epithelial cell-cell contacts (electric cell-substrate impedance sensing). With these tools we have studied the impact of nanoparticle shape on cellular physiology. Gold (Au) nanoparticles coated with CTAB were synthesized and studied in two distinct shapes: Spheres with a diameter of (43 ± 4) nm and rods with a size of (38 ± 7) nm × (17 ± 3) nm. Dose-response experiments were accompanied by conventional cytotoxicity tests as well as fluorescence and dark-field microscopy to v…

Materials scienceSurface PropertiesBiomedical EngineeringAnalytical chemistryMetal NanoparticlesNanoparticle02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistryToxicology01 natural sciencesCell LineSurface-Active AgentsCell MovementMicroscopyAnimalsParticle SizeCytoskeletonDose-Response Relationship DrugCetrimoniumEpithelial CellsQuartz crystal microbalance021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesColloidal goldCetrimonium CompoundsBiophysicsParticleSurface modificationGoldParticle sizeReactive Oxygen Species0210 nano-technologyBiosensorNanotoxicology
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Attachement and spreading of fibroblasts on an RGD peptide-modified injectable hyaluronan hydrogel

2004

Hyaluronan (HA) hydrogels resist attachment and spreading of fibroblasts and most other mammalian cell types. A thiol-modified HA (3,3'-dithiobis(propanoic dihydrazide) [HA-DTPH]) was modified with peptides containing the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence and then crosslinked with polyethylene glycol (PEG) diacrylate (PEGDA) to create a biomaterial that supported cell attachment, spreading, and proliferation. The hydrogels were evaluated in vitro and in vivo in three assay systems. First, the behavior of human and murine fibroblasts on the surface of the hydrogels was evaluated. The concentration and structure of the RGD peptides and the length of the PEG spacer influenced cell attachment and spre…

Materials scienceTime FactorsBiomedical EngineeringCell Culture TechniquesRGD Hyaluronic acidPeptideBiocompatible Materialsmacromolecular substancesBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundMiceTissue engineeringIn vivoCell MovementHyaluronic acidPEG ratioCell AdhesionAnimalsHyaluronic Acidchemistry.chemical_classificationbiologytechnology industry and agricultureHydrogelsFibroblastsMolecular biologyFibronectinchemistryCell cultureSelf-healing hydrogelsbiology.proteinBiophysicsNIH 3T3 CellsOligopeptides
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Live imaging of stem cell and progeny behaviour in physiological hair-follicle regeneration

2012

Tissue development and regeneration depend on cell-cell interactions and signals that target stem cells and their immediate progeny. However, the cellular behaviours that lead to a properly regenerated tissue are not well understood. Using a new, non-invasive, intravital two-photon imaging approach we study physiological hair-follicle regeneration over time in live mice. By these means we have monitored the behaviour of epithelial stem cells and their progeny during physiological hair regeneration and addressed how the mesenchyme influences their behaviour. Consistent with earlier studies, stem cells are quiescent during the initial stages of hair regeneration, whereas the progeny are more …

MesodermCell divisionCell SurvivalMesenchymeMice TransgenicBiologyArticleMesodermMiceCell MovementStem CellLive cell imagingmedicineAnimalsRegenerationMultidisciplinaryintegumentary systemAnimalStem CellsMedicine (all)Regeneration (biology)DermisHair follicleCell biologyMicroscopy Fluorescence Multiphotonmedicine.anatomical_structureAnimals; Cell Division; Cell Movement; Cell Survival; Cell Tracking; Dermis; Hair Follicle; Laser Therapy; Mesoderm; Mice; Mice Transgenic; Microscopy Fluorescence Multiphoton; Regeneration; Stem Cells; Medicine (all); MultidisciplinaryCell TrackingDermiLaser TherapyStem cellHair FollicleDevelopmental biologyCell DivisionNature
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Cell motility probed by noise analysis of thickness shear mode resonators.

2006

The quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) technique is an emerging bioanalytical tool to study the behavior of animal cells in vitro. Due to the high interfacial sensitivity of thickness shear mode (TSM) resonators it is possible to monitor the formation and breakage of cell-matrix interactions and changes in viscoelasticity of the cell bodies, as well as minute cell volume alterations by the time course of their resonance frequency even with millisecond time resolution. We found that mammalian MDCK-II cells grown on TSM resonators impose characteristic fluctuations on the resonance frequency, which are a quantitative indicator for dynamic activities of the cells on the surface and report on th…

MillisecondOsmotic shockChemistryAnalytical chemistryQuartz crystal microbalanceNoise (electronics)ViscoelasticityAnalytical ChemistryCell LineResonatorchemistry.chemical_compoundDogsCell MovementBiophysicsAnimalsCytochalasinNoiseElectrical impedanceAnalytical chemistry
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Biocompatibility of three new calcium silicate-based endodontic sealers on human periodontal ligament stem cells.

2016

Aim To evaluate the biocompatibility of three calcium silicate-based endodontic sealers, Bioroot BC Sealer (Septodont, Saint-Maur-des-Fosses, France), Endoseal MTA (EndoSeal, Maruchi, Seoul, Korea) and Nano-ceramic Sealer (B&L Biotech, Fairfax, VA, USA) (NCS), on human periodontal ligament stem cells (hPDLSCs). Methodology Human periodontal ligament stem cells were cultured in the presence of various endodontic sealer eluates for 24 h. Cell viability was determined using the MTT assay. Cell death and changes in phenotype induced by the set endodontic sealer eluates were evaluated through flow cytometry. Also, an in vitro scratch wound-healing model was used to determine their effects in cel…

Mineral trioxide aggregateBiocompatibilityPeriodontal ligament stem cellsPeriodontal LigamentDentistry02 engineering and technologyCell morphologyEndodonticsRoot Canal Filling Materials03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCell MovementMaterials TestingPeriodontal fiberHumansMTT assayViability assayGeneral DentistryCells CulturedCell Proliferationbusiness.industryCell growthChemistrySilicatesStem Cells030206 dentistryCalcium Compounds021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyMolecular biology0210 nano-technologybusinessInternational endodontic journal
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Itraconazole inhibits nuclear delivery of extracellular vesicle cargo by disrupting the entry of late endosomes into the nucleoplasmic reticulum

2021

ABSTRACT Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are mediators of intercellular communication under both healthy and pathological conditions, including the induction of pro‐metastatic traits, but it is not yet known how and where functional cargoes of EVs are delivered to their targets in host cell compartments. We have described that after endocytosis, EVs reach Rab7+ late endosomes and a fraction of these enter the nucleoplasmic reticulum and transport EV biomaterials to the host cell nucleoplasm. Their entry therein and docking to outer nuclear membrane occur through a tripartite complex formed by the proteins VAP‐A, ORP3 and Rab7 (VOR complex). Here, we report that the antifungal compound itracona…

Models MolecularHistologyAntifungal AgentsEndosomeNuclear EnvelopeNucleoplasmic reticulumActive Transport Cell NucleusVesicular Transport ProteinsHost cell nucleoplasmEndosomesEndocytosisFatty Acid-Binding ProteinsExosomeCell LineExtracellular VesiclesCell MovementSettore BIO/13 - Biologia ApplicataHumanscancerexosomemetastasisendosomeResearch ArticlesCholestenonesmicro‐vesicleQH573-671Chemistryrab7 GTP-Binding ProteinsCell BiologyExtracellular vesicleSaponinsEndocytosisCell biologyKetoconazoleCancer cellintercellular communicationnucleoplasmic reticulumcancer endosome exosome intercellular communication metastasis micro-vesicle nucleoplasmicreticulumItraconazoleCytologyIntracellularResearch ArticleJournal of Extracellular Vesicles
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International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. XCIV. Adhesion G Protein–Coupled Receptors

2015

The Adhesion family forms a large branch of the pharmacologically important superfamily of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). As Adhesion GPCRs increasingly receive attention from a wide spectrum of biomedical fields, the Adhesion GPCR Consortium, together with the International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology Committee on Receptor Nomenclature and Drug Classification, proposes a unified nomenclature for Adhesion GPCRs. The new names have ADGR as common dominator followed by a letter and a number to denote each subfamily and subtype, respectively. The new names, with old and alternative names within parentheses, are: ADGRA1 (GPR123), ADGRA2 (GPR124), ADGRA3 (GPR125), ADGRB1 (BAI1…

Models MolecularSocieties ScientificSubfamilyComputational biologyBiologyGPR110PharmacologyLigandsGPR113Second Messenger SystemsReceptors G-Protein-CoupledCell MovementTerminology as TopicCell AdhesionCyclic AMPAnimalsHumansProtein IsoformsReceptorNomenclatureG protein-coupled receptorPharmacologyCell MembraneInternational AgenciesAdhesionQPGPR56Pharmacology ClinicalIUPHAR Nomenclature ReportsMolecular MedicineQP517Cell Adhesion MoleculesSignal TransductionPharmacological Reviews
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