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      Aligned Magnetic and Bioconvection Effects on Tangent Hyperbolic Nanofluid Flow Across Faster/Slower Stretching Wedge with Activation Energy: Finite Element Simulation

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          Re-epithelialization and immune cell behaviour in an ex vivo human skin model

          A large body of literature is available on wound healing in humans. Nonetheless, a standardized ex vivo wound model without disruption of the dermal compartment has not been put forward with compelling justification. Here, we present a novel wound model based on application of negative pressure and its effects for epidermal regeneration and immune cell behaviour. Importantly, the basement membrane remained intact after blister roof removal and keratinocytes were absent in the wounded area. Upon six days of culture, the wound was covered with one to three-cell thick K14+Ki67+ keratinocyte layers, indicating that proliferation and migration were involved in wound closure. After eight to twelve days, a multi-layered epidermis was formed expressing epidermal differentiation markers (K10, filaggrin, DSG-1, CDSN). Investigations about immune cell-specific manners revealed more T cells in the blister roof epidermis compared to normal epidermis. We identified several cell populations in blister roof epidermis and suction blister fluid that are absent in normal epidermis which correlated with their decrease in the dermis, indicating a dermal efflux upon negative pressure. Together, our model recapitulates the main features of epithelial wound regeneration, and can be applied for testing wound healing therapies and investigating underlying mechanisms.
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            Convective Transport in Nanofluids

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              "Bioconvection Patterns" in Cultures of Free-Swimming Organisms

              The moving polygonal patterns in dense cultures of Tetrahymena and other ciliates and flagellates look like "Benard cells," but are not due to thermal convection. They seem to be due to a similar dynamic instability that occurs when the energy input is internal and mechanical. The high concentration in the patterns may be useful in fertilization.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Applied and Computational Mathematics
                Int. J. Appl. Comput. Math
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                2349-5103
                2199-5796
                August 2021
                July 05 2021
                August 2021
                : 7
                : 4
                Article
                10.1007/s40819-021-01097-0
                44108dd8-f78a-415f-9d6b-f8dee775409b
                © 2021

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

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