coupling cell
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2021 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 170a
Author(s):  
Ifunanya Nwogbaga ◽  
Brian Camley
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Alexander Fletcher ◽  
James Osborne

The growth and dynamics of multicellular tissues involve tightly regulated and coordinated morphogenetic cell behaviours, such as shape changes, movement, and division, which are governed by subcellular machinery and involve coupling through short- and long-range signals. A key challenge in the fields of developmental biology, tissue engineering and regeneration is to understand how relationships between scales produce emergent tissue-scale behaviours. Recent advances in molecular biology, live-imaging and ex vivo techniques have revolutionised our ability to study these processes experimentally. To fully leverage these techniques and obtain a more comprehensive understanding of the causal relationships underlying tissue dynamics, computational modelling approaches are increasingly spanning multiple spatial and temporal scales, and are coupling cell shape, growth, mechanics and signalling. Yet such models remain technically challenging: modelling at each scale requires different areas of technical skills, while integration across scales necessitates the solution to novel mathematical and computational problems. This review aims to summarise recent progress in multiscale modelling of multicellular tissues and to highlight ongoing challenges associated with the construction, implementation, interrogation and validation of such models.


Author(s):  
Nirmalendu Das

It is difficult to calculate fixed data of a number of cells in a body. It is varying on time and age of life. The time increasing that cells are increasing, though we can estimate the number of cells in various nerves in a body, brain, sexual platform, etc through a couple system. The coupling system is a new system of the finding of peculiar series of numbers [1], which is applies to many fields. In the cases of Medical Science, it has been observed by calculation that due to disturbing of the couple caused different difficulties in the body. A smooth Coupling cell may produce a healthy body, and it is possible to increase memory by adding particular cells number in a loss position. The coupling system is interesting that, can explain the real mechanism of every cell. There are many types of cells in a living body. Almost all cells follow a couple of system. The coupling system performs coupling between two (say, A, 1st party & B, 2nd party) with keeping relation as 3rd party, denoted by R (Relative Number) mathematically.


2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomáš Sixta ◽  
Jiahui Cao ◽  
Jochen Seebach ◽  
Hans Schnittler ◽  
Boris Flach

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reegan J. Willms ◽  
Jie Zeng ◽  
Shelagh D. Campbell

SUMMARYInhibitory phosphorylation of Cdk1 is a well-established mechanism for gating mitotic entry during development. However, failure to inhibit Cdk1 in adult organs causes ectopic cell division and tissue dysplasia, indicating that Cdk1 inhibition is also required for cell cycle exit. Two types of progenitor cells populate the adult Drosophila midgut: intestinal stem cells (ISCs) and post-mitotic enteroblasts (EBs). ISCs are the only mitotic cells under homeostatic conditions, dividing asymmetrically to produce quiescent EB daughter cells. We show here that Myt1, the membrane associated Cdk1 inhibitory kinase, is required for EB quiescence and subsequent differentiation. Loss of Myt1 disrupts EB cell cycle dynamics, promoting Cyclin A-dependent mitosis and accumulation of smaller progenitor-like cells that fail to differentiate. Thus, Myt1 inhibition of Cyclin A/Cdk1 functions as a mechanism for coupling cell cycle arrest with terminal cell differentiation in this developmental context.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 204173141982716 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lingze Liu ◽  
Quan Shi ◽  
Qiang Chen ◽  
Zhiyong Li

Undegradable scaffolds, as a key element in bone tissue engineering, prevail in the present clinical applications, and the bone in-growth into such scaffolds under mechanical stimulus is an important issue to evaluate the bone-repair effect. This work aims to develop a mathematical framework to investigate the effect of mechanical stimulus on the bone in-growth into undegradable scaffolds. First, the osteoclast and osteoblast activities were coupled by their autocrine and paracrine effects. Second, the mechanical stimulus was empirically incorporated into the coupling cell activities on the basis of experimental observations. Third, the effect of mechanical stimulus including intensity and duration on the bone in-growth process was numerically studied; moreover, the homeostasis of scaffold–bone system under the mechanical stimulus was also treated. The results showed that the numbers of osteoblasts and osteoclasts in the scaffold–bone system tended to constants representing the system homeostasis. Both the mechanical intensity and duration optimized the final bone formation. The numerical results of the bone formation were comparable to the experimental results in rats. The findings from this modeling study could be used to explain many physiological phenomena and clinical observations. The developed model integrates both cell and tissue scales, which can be used as a platform to investigate bone remodeling under mechanical stimulus.


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