2 results match your criteria: "Queen Mary and West field College[Affiliation]"
Chembiochem
November 2006
IRC in Biomedical Materials, Queen Mary and West Field College, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, UK.
We report a novel technique for preparing cross-linked protein membranes within microchannels by using an interfacial cross-linking reaction. Glass microchannels with a Y input were assembled by using a simple adhesive bonding technique to achieve dual, parallel laminar flows. Membrane formation utilised an interfacial reaction at the liquid-liquid interface, which involved bovine serum albumin (aqueous solution with a flow rate of 300 microL min(-1)) and terephthaloyl chloride (xylene solution with a flow rate of 700 microL min(-1)), to form thin ( approximately 25 microm) cross-linked films along the length of the channel under the continuous pressure-driven laminar flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
April 1996
School of Biological Sciences, Queen Mary and West field College, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, UK.
The thallus of the metzgerialean liverwort Symphyogyna brasiliensis Nets contains a strand of dead thick-walled tells with helicoidally-arranged pits that arc presumably involved in water transport. During the first phase of differentiation these cells undergo a 13-16-fold elongation while remaining thin-walled and almost unchanged in diameter. During subsequent maturation the walls become strongly thickened by deposition of highly electron-opaque material on extraplasmodesmal areas and of transparent material forming collars around plasmodesmata.
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