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  • Book
    edited by Caterina A. M. La Porta, Stefano Zapperi.
    Summary: Cell migration plays an important role during development and in many physiological and pathological processes, from wound healing to cancer. This edited volume presents a collection of contributions meant to illustrate the state of the art on this topic from an interdisciplinary perspective. Readers will find a detailed discussion of the properties of individual and collective cell migration, including the associated biochemical regulation and important biophysical and biomechanical aspects. The book includes information on the latest experimental techniques employed to study cell migration, from microfluidics to traction force microscopy, as well as the latest theoretical and computational models used to interpret the experimental data. Finally, the role of cell migration in cancer and in development is also reviewed. The contents of this work should appeal to students and researchers in biology and biophysics who want to get up to date on the latest interdisciplinary development in this broad field of research. The chapters are written in a self-contained form and can also be used as individual articles.

    Contents:
    Computational modeling of Collective Cell Migration: Mechanical and biochemical aspects
    Contour models of cellular adhesion
    Force and Collective Epithelial Activities
    Continuum models of collective cell migration
    Statistical features of collective cell migration
    Cell migration in microfluidic devices: Invadosomes formation in confined environments
    Collective Cell Migration in Development
    Nuclear mechanics and cancer cell migration.
    Digital Access Springer 2019
  • Article
    Turner KJ, Sumarmo, Matondang-Siahaan C.
    Clin Allergy. 1978 Mar;8(2):145-54.
    Skin test results and IgE antibody levels measured by RAST indicate that hypersensitivity to house dust mite (D. pteronyssinus) is a major feature of asthma and allergic rhinitis in Indonesian children. Total serum IgE levels were higher in the allergic than in control children. 60% (twenty-one out of thirty-five) of the asthmatic children and 56% (five out of nine) of the children with allergic rhinitis had IgE antibodies to the helminth Ascaris lumbricoides compared with none out of four control children. A tendency was found for high IgE antibody levels to D. pteronyssinus to occur in association with low IgE antibody levels to A. lumbricoides and vice versa.
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