The bacterial colony is a powerful experimental platform for broad biological research, and reaction-diffusion models are widely used to study the mechanisms of its formation process. However, there are still some crucial factors that drastically affect the colony growth but are not considered in the current models, such as the non-homogeneously distributed nutrient within the colony and the substantially decreasing expansion rate caused by agar dehydration. In our study, we propose two plausible reaction-diffusion models (the VN and MVN models) based on the above two factors and validate them against experimental data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Control Syst Lett
December 2021
Bacterial colony formations exhibit diverse morphologies and dynamics. A mechanistic understanding of this process has broad implications to ecology and medicine. However, many control factors and their impacts on colony formation remain underexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Clin Oncol
January 2016
Since the last decade, the PIM family serine/threonine kinases have become a focus in cancer research. Numerous clinical data supports that overexpression of PIM1 is associated with tumor formation in various tissues. However, little is known regarding the function of PIM1 in cancer stem cells.
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