In a medium without serum, the initial adhesion of L1210 cells to nonsulfonated and sulfonated polymer surfaces was investigated. In the case of sulfonated polymer surfaces, the relative number of adhering cells strongly increases with an increase of the interfacial surface tension; that is, adhesio
Theoretical and experimental analysis of cellular adhesion to polymer surfaces
β Scribed by Strong, A. B. ;Stubley, G. D. ;Chang, G. ;Absolom, D. R.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 940 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9304
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β¦ Synopsis
An exact discrete numerical solution to the Grabowski model for predicting cell adhesion to polymer surfaces is discussed. The solution technique allows the possibility of taking into account cell-cell interactions within the flow situation and the multistep process involved in thrombus formation. The proposed solution also allows modification of the wall reaction rate model into a two species reaction rate which distinguishes between the kinetics of contact adhesion and irreversible adhesion. The solution allows determination of effective diffusivity (De) and surface reaction rate (k) constants. Use of the model to examine available experimental data results in the following conclusions: (1) static or dynamic cell adhesion cannot be considered to be diffusion limited; (2) for flow conditions De is a monotonically increasing function of shear rate; (3) under static, i.e., zero flow conditions, De appears to be markedly larger than for flow conditions.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
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The ability of bacteria to adhere to surfaces is a major cause of concern in the use of biomaterial substrates. The adhesion of Staphylococcus epidermidis strain 1938 was examined using image analysis and was found not to correlate with polymer surface tension, unlike that of Lactobacillus acidophil
## Abstract In our previous study [Hong Y, Brown DG (2009) Appl Environ Microbiol 75(8):2346β2353], the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level of adhered bacteria was observed to be 2β5 times higher than that of planktonic bacteria. Consequently, the proton motive force (Ξ__p__) of adhered bacteria was
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