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1 suggest a simple design rule for controlled shape change.
2 tin polymerization, platelet activation, and shape change.
3 which correspond to the protein's effective shape change.
4 lets, which mediate platelet aggregation and shape change.
5 pe change, which defines the onset of tissue shape change.
6 memory polymer to regulate the time of such shape change.
7 umbers in a bilayered epithelium can lead to shape change.
8 rkers and TH2 cytokines, and eotaxin-induced shape change.
9 actomyosin redistribution together with cell shape change.
10 tures for cell proliferation, migration, and shape change.
11 rnover and generating the force for filament shape change.
12 d, putatively, diseases associated with cell shape change.
13 ex vivo prostaglandin D2-mediated eosinophil shape change.
14 activate G protein 13 signaling for platelet shape change.
15 thological platelet activation and amplifies shape change.
16 udies how the cytoskeleton controls cellular shape change.
17 that regulate NF-kappaB in response to cell shape changes.
18 es based on their past shape despite dynamic shape changes.
19 ntractility is critical for tissues to adopt shape changes.
20 long "track" MTs, resulting in dramatic cell shape changes.
21 nce of myosin motor activity cell and tissue shape changes.
22 Tissue morphogenesis is orchestrated by cell shape changes.
23 cell divisions, cell rearrangements and cell shape changes.
24 ynamics of N-BAR proteins relate to membrane shape changes.
25 s of stabilization to result in irreversible shape changes.
26 uce a variety of tissue movements and tissue shape changes.
27 ng to a comprehensive model for actin-driven shape changes.
28 ns, as well as a variety of resulting tissue shape changes.
29 pal mechanistic features underlying cellular shape changes.
30 es tight spatiotemporal coordination of cell shape changes.
31 is cancelled by cell rearrangements and cell shape changes.
32 process driven by asymmetric epidermal cell shape changes.
33 ental steps power cell-autonomous epithelial shape changes(1-3), which suggests the existence of spec
34 riven locomotion but retain the soft-bodied, shape-changing ability to explore confined environments.
36 g the FABD fully rescued morphogenesis, cell shape change, actin regulation, and viability, whereas k
37 vestigated how physiologically relevant cell shape changes affect subcellular organization, and conse
39 which reproduced the experimentally observed shape changes after surgical and photochemical operation
43 These membrane reservoirs facilitate cell shape change and buffer mechanical stress, but we do not
46 supporting cells was also more sensitive to shape change and inhibition of MST1/2 in chicken utricle
47 the time-dependent correlation between cell shape change and intracellular factors that may play a r
51 t to elongation at the growth zone, but cell shape change and rearrangement contribute as much as 40%
53 large scale tissue deformations, cell level shape change and subcellular F-actin organization and by
54 a lesser extent, width are major drivers of shape change and that these traits are still relatively
55 mptions by visualizing the stages of nuclear shape change and the corresponding evolution of the cort
56 od-shaped cells were committed to subsequent shape change and to becoming sonication-resistant spores
58 as a new model system for understanding cell shape change and, putatively, diseases associated with c
63 iors have been extensively studied, how cell shape changes and cell divisions that occur concurrently
65 ells by MK571 or probenecid resulted in cell shape changes and decreases in actin stress fibers and M
66 and Sox2), actomyosin disorganisation, cell shape changes and diminished resistance to neural fold r
68 siderable interspecies variation in the cell shape changes and neighbor exchanges underlying appendag
73 ks driven by myosin activation controls cell shape changes and tissue morphogenesis during animal dev
74 ical mechanisms governing ligand-induced RNA shape-change and enables the development of cell-free an
75 sites and respond with filipodia protrusion, shape change, and surface area expansion to facilitate p
76 g of a hydrogel as the driving force for the shape change, and the temperature-dependent modulus of a
77 e result of coordinated cell movements, cell shape changes, and the organisation of pigment cells dur
78 nd heterogenous layouts that exhibit complex shape changes, and whose transformed shapes could be loc
83 Computer simulations indicate that micellar shape changes are associated with different binding of t
95 longevity pathways.Mitochondria can undergo shape changes as a result of fusion and fission events.
96 nding magnetocaloric cooling with reversible shape changes as high as 5.6% under only 1.3 T, or 3 T a
97 shape-change assay relative to the isolated shape change assay, potentially reflective of its relati
98 W039 retained its potency in the whole-blood shape-change assay relative to the isolated shape change
100 and platelet aggregates stimulated leukocyte shape change at sites of endothelial injury; however, on
101 tors of innate immunity and undergo dramatic shape changes at all stages of their functional life cyc
104 ion of molecular switches to stimulate rapid shape changes at the macroscale and thus to maximize act
105 raphy changes dramatically during neutrophil shape change (both locally and globally) and can be trig
106 , the materials not only exhibit substantial shape changes but also remember the functions in the ass
107 d inhibited PGD2-stimulated human eosinophil shape change, but importantly QAW039 retained its potenc
108 he mechanical feedback systems ensure robust shape changes, but if they go awry, they are poised to p
110 ical actin network controls many animal cell shape changes by locally modulating cortical tension.
111 duce functional changes in a device and that shape changes can be actuated via heating of printed com
113 eloping zebrafish embryo as their successive shape changes can be visualized in real-time in vivo.
114 inuous case, we find that sufficiently large shape changes can drive reconfiguration on timescales co
117 develop through complex coordination of cell shape change, cell migration, and cell proliferation.
118 ables quantification of the dynamics of cell shape changes, cell interfaces and neighbor relations at
119 hormonal controls that orchestrate the cell shape changes, cell-cell junction remodeling and polariz
120 ithelial organ size and shape depend on cell shape changes, cell-matrix communication, and apical mem
121 enhanced chemoattractant-induced eosinophil shape change, chemotaxis, CD11b surface expression, and
122 of platelet biology, including aggregation, shape change, coagulation, and degranulation, as well as
125 port that MxA forms membraneless metastable (shape-changing) condensates in the cytoplasm consisting
129 and PIN1a suggests that PAN2-dependent cell shape changes do not involve any of these proteins, indi
130 l behaviors originate from the Fermi surface shape change due to pressure-induced band inversion.
131 host red cell undergoes an abrupt, dramatic shape change due to the sudden breakdown of the erythroc
132 ion furrow can also achieve the same type of shape change during cytokinesis without myosin contracti
134 model was generated to simulate the nuclear shape change during differentiation and predict the forc
136 [7, 13], we find that over 74% of rapid eye-shape change during mammalian evolutionary history is di
139 llular matrix (ECM) adhesions regulates cell shape changes during embryonic development and tissue ho
142 ent that the cell nucleus undergoes dramatic shape changes during important cellular processes such a
143 tiate the regulation of NMII to mediate cell shape changes during MHB morphogenesis are not known.
145 ork beneath the cell membrane, to facilitate shape changes during processes like cytokinesis and moti
147 ion and the ecological significance of brain shape changes during the evolutionary diversification of
149 We find that the specific sequence of cell-shape changes during VF formation is critically controll
150 s a powerful method to understand how tissue shape changes emerge from the complex choreography of co
151 n Shh(-/-) mutants, which recapitulate heart shape changes expected from a persistent dorsal mesocard
156 e suppressive mutations lead to a major cell shape change, from the normal cylindrical shape to a bra
160 he physical basis for the regulation of cell shape changes, here, we use a cell-like system with a co
162 dependent, time-resolved information on cell shape changes (impedance) and dynamic mass redistributio
167 inding of Neph1 did not induce a significant shape change in Myo1c, indicating this as a spontaneous
168 al flow, drove a lamellipodial-to-filopodial shape change in suspended cells, and induced a novel act
169 clude by describing several forces likely to shape change in the medical liability environment over t
171 elop a general mathematical model to examine shape changes in a permeable object subject to boundary
174 a high-throughput image cytometer to assess shape changes in Escherichia coli during hyperosmotic sh
176 g isoform M23-AQP4 (AQP4-OAP) triggered cell shape changes in glioma cells associated with alteration
177 ic tissues provides positional cues to drive shape changes in mammalian development during implantati
179 dent diversity of HIV-1 Envs as they undergo shape changes in proceeding down the entry pathway.
180 Responsive hydrogels that undergo controlled shape changes in response to a range of stimuli are of i
181 ning multiple domains that undergo different shape changes in response to different DNA sequences.
182 sts that these MyosinII meshworks drive cell shape changes in response to external forces, and thus t
183 /actin filament interactions underlying cell shape changes in response to guidance cues, plays a role
184 CPs) programmed to undergo three-dimensional shape changes in response to light are promising materia
185 stalline elastomers (LCE) undergo reversible shape changes in response to stimuli, which enables a wi
189 such interactions have been identified with shape changes in the sprouts and the associated rearrang
193 podocytes not susceptible to sema3a-induced shape changes, indicating that MICAL1 mediates sema3a-in
195 veness in vitro as measured by Ca(2+) -flux, shape change, integrin (CD11b) expression, and chemotaxi
197 rradiation eventually results in undesirable shape changes, irradiation growth, that limit the servic
201 rized; however, the mechanical basis of cell shape changes is largely unknown because of a lack of me
206 (ECM), are known to drive cell branching and shape change largely through a myosin-II-mediated reorga
207 pical constriction is a widely utilized cell shape change linked to folding, bending and invagination
208 res strongly regulated by size, with axes of shape change linked to the actions of recently identifie
210 structural systems that can achieve gigantic shape change, making them ideal as a platform for super
216 the slow host-guest exchange and switchable shape change of the cavity, quantitative release and cap
217 how the method can be used to model nuclear shape changes of human-induced pluripotent stem cells re
218 r and mechanical processes that underlie the shape changes of individual cells and their collective b
219 t is transformed into units of strain by the shape changes of individual switches, until a threshold
220 g, but the interplay of these processes with shape changes of the material remains to be explored.
223 from alveolar type I and type II cells, cell shape changes of type I cells and migration of myofibrob
225 e quantitatively account for this wing-blade shape change on the basis of cell divisions, cell rearra
229 her elongation mechanisms, specifically cell shape change, orientated cell division and cell rearrang
230 Moreover, quantitative analysis of filament shape change over time revealed that myosin XI generates
231 s to quantify tissue deformation and surface shape changes over the course of leaf development, appli
235 orally controlled leukocyte adhesiveness and shape-changes promoting leukocyte attachment to the inne
241 plays an important role in the turgor-driven shape changes required for stomatal pore opening to occu
245 he electrical resistivity measurement with V shape change signals the transition from a Rashba type t
246 platform for super light-weight structures, shape-changing soft robots, morphing antenna and RF devi
248 ous microarchitectures designed for specific shape change strategies, e.g. sequential shape recovery.
250 the membrane components as well as dramatic shape changes such as endocytosis, vesicular trafficking
251 orce imbalance at cell contacts induces cell shape changes, such as apical constriction or polarized
253 Inherent adaptability should allow such shape-changing systems to measure numerous different env
254 sterior zonules may have a greater impact on shape change than the equatorial zonule and that choice
257 VF formation along the same sequence of cell-shape change that we observed in the actual embryo, with
258 ch flexible E153-R210 links mediate capsomer shape changes that control where pentons are placed to c
259 astrulation pathway triggers epithelial cell shape changes that drive gastrulation and tissue folding
260 cytoskeleton is a major determinant of cell-shape changes that drive the formation of complex tissue
264 n must be maintained during the complex cell shape changes that occur during cytokinesis in vertebrat
266 even more regulatory events driving the cell shape changes that produce tubes of specific dimensions.
267 folding/unfolding can contribute to the cell-shape changes that promote embryonic morphogenesis.
268 is stimulus, rather than causing a temporary shape change, the CAN structure responds by permanently
269 both a-cells and alpha-cells and their cell shape changes, the extracellular diffusion of mating phe
270 er (LCE) matrix that can achieve macroscopic shape change through a liquid crystal phase transition.
272 ation of cell contractility coordinates cell shape change to construct tissue architecture and ultima
274 cently developed methods for relating tissue shape changes to cell dynamics have not yet been widely
275 apices, undergo a series of coordinated cell-shape changes to form a ventral furrow (VF) and are subs
276 broader cortical areas induces proportional shape changes to growth domains, demonstrating that both
277 zation, we demonstrate how to exploit subtle shape changes to infer cell wall material properties.
282 ) have the ability to show large recoverable shape changes upon temperature, stress or magnetic field
283 lates between two defect configurations, and shape-changing vesicles with streaming filopodia-like pr
285 )-mediated inhibition of thrombin-stimulated shape change was accompanied by diminished phosphorylati
286 domains into the hydrogels, light-activated shape change was achieved, while domains bearing magneti
289 on, but neither additional eyespots nor wing shape changes were observed in forewings as expected of
290 onally modelling Ca(2+) release, endothelial shape changes were shown to alter the geometry of the Ca
291 it slightly enlarged meshwork faces and some shape changes, whereas LB1-deficient nuclei exhibit prim
293 (AC) is a widely utilized mechanism of cell shape change whereby epithelial cells transform from a c
294 tural basis for the known dramatic molecular shape change, whereby the molecular length can increase
295 d nanoparticles initiates a rapid isothermal shape change which triggers the activation of multiple f
297 nsition from reversible to irreversible cell shape change, which defines the onset of tissue shape ch
298 cochemical properties but also their dynamic shape changes, which are required in various essential f
300 s, as they undergo large reversible uniaxial shape changes, with strains of 20-500% and stresses of 1