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Intercellular fluid flow, not just cell structure, governs how tissues respond to physical forces
In a paper appearing in Nature Physics, the researchers show that when a tissue is pressed or squeezed, it is more compliant and relaxes more quickly when the fluid between its cells flows easily.
Flow cytometry offers practical advantages for real-time monitoring of CAR T cell expansion, persistence, and toxicity risk in aggressive large B-cell lymphoma patients. Early CAR T cell expansion is ...
These images use color markers—blue for nuclei, red for cell membranes, and green for fluid—to show that spaces between cells shrink as fluid moves out during tissue compression, from left to right ...
The Francis Crick Institute’s flow cytometry core has shown at ELRIG 2025 how a heterogeneous fleet of spectral, mass and ...
Flow cytometry is an invaluable method for biomedical research. Since its development over 50 years ago, technology for flow cytometry has progressed rapidly, allowing for the detection of more and ...
Water makes up around 60 percent of the human body. More than half of this water sloshes around inside the cells that make up organs and tissues. Much of the remaining water flows in the nooks and ...
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