Publications by authors named "Bi-Cong Wang"

During physiological and pathological processes, cells experience significant morphological alterations with the re-arrangement of cytoskeletal filaments, resulting in anisotropic viscoelasticity. Here, a structure-based cell model is proposed to study the anisotropic viscoelastic mechanical behaviors of living cells. We investigate how cell shape affects its creep responses in longitudinal and perpendicular directions.

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Collective cell migration plays a vital role in various physiological and pathological processes, such as embryonic development and tumor metastasis. Recent experiments have shown that different from isolated cells, the moving cell groups exhibit rich emerging motion modes in response to external geometrical constraints. By considering the interactions between neighboring cells and internal biomechanical processes of each cell (, cell sociality and cell individuality), we develop an active vertex model to investigate the emerging modes of collective cell migration in microchannels.

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Sub-10 nm nanoparticles are known to exhibit extraordinary size-dependent properties for wide applications. Many approaches have been developed for synthesizing sub-10 nm inorganic nanoparticles, but the fabrication of sub-10 nm polymeric nanoparticles is still challenging. Here, a scalable, spontaneous confined nanoemulsification strategy that produces uniform sub-10 nm nanodroplets for template synthesis of sub-10 nm polymeric nanoparticles is proposed.

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Collective cell migration occurs in a wide range of physiological and pathological processes, such as wound healing and tumor metastasis. Experiments showed that many types of cells confined in circular islands can perform coherent angular rotation, yet the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here we propose a biomechanical model, including the membrane, microtubules, and nucleus, to study the spatiotemporal evolutions of small cell clusters in confined space.

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