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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans in untanned mammalian skin

Kemp, P. D. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
2

Physical sectioning in 3D biological microscopy

Guntupalli, Jyothi Swaroop 15 May 2009 (has links)
Our ability to analyze the microstructure of biological tissue in three dimensions (3D) has proven invaluable in modeling its functionality, and therefore providing a better understanding of the basic mechanisms of life. Volumetric imaging of tissue at the cellular level, using serial imaging of consecutive tissue sections, provides such ability to acquire microstructure in 3D. Three-dimensional light microscopy in biology can be broadly classified as using either optical sectioning or physical sectioning. Due to the inherent limitations on the depth resolution in optical sectioning, and the recent introduction of novel techniques, physical sectioning has become the sought-out method to obtain high-resolution volumetric tissue structure data. To meet this demand with increased processing speed in 3D biological imaging, this thesis provides an engineering study and formulation of the tissue sectioning process. The knife-edge scanning microscopy (KESM), a novel physical sectioning and imaging instrument developed in the Brain Networks Laboratory at Texas A&M University, has been used for the purpose of this study. However, the modes of characterizing chatter and its measurement are equally applicable to all current variants of 3D biological microscopy using physical sectioning. We focus on chatter in the physical sectioning process, principally characterizing it by its geometric and optical attributes. Some important nonlinear dynamical models of chatter in the sectioning process, drawn from the metal machining literature, are introduced and compared with observed measurements of chatter in the tissue cutting process. To understand the effects of the embedding polymer on tissue sectioning, we discuss methods to characterize the polymer material and present polymer measurements. Image processing techniques are introduced as a method to abate chatter artifacts in the volumetric data that has already been obtained. Ultra-precise machining techniques, using (1) free-form nanomachining and (2) an oscillating knife, are introduced as potential ways to acquire chatter-free higher-resolution volumetric data in less time. Finally, conclusions of our study and future work conclude the thesis. In this thesis, we conclude that to achieve ultrathin sectioning and high-resolution imaging, embedded plastic should be soft. To overcome the machining defects of soft plastics, we suggested free-form nanomachining and sectioning with an oscillating knife.
3

Physical sectioning in 3D biological microscopy

Guntupalli, Jyothi Swaroop 10 October 2008 (has links)
Our ability to analyze the microstructure of biological tissue in three dimensions (3D) has proven invaluable in modeling its functionality, and therefore providing a better understanding of the basic mechanisms of life. Volumetric imaging of tissue at the cellular level, using serial imaging of consecutive tissue sections, provides such ability to acquire microstructure in 3D. Three-dimensional light microscopy in biology can be broadly classified as using either optical sectioning or physical sectioning. Due to the inherent limitations on the depth resolution in optical sectioning, and the recent introduction of novel techniques, physical sectioning has become the sought-out method to obtain high-resolution volumetric tissue structure data. To meet this demand with increased processing speed in 3D biological imaging, this thesis provides an engineering study and formulation of the tissue sectioning process. The knife-edge scanning microscopy (KESM), a novel physical sectioning and imaging instrument developed in the Brain Networks Laboratory at Texas A&M University, has been used for the purpose of this study. However, the modes of characterizing chatter and its measurement are equally applicable to all current variants of 3D biological microscopy using physical sectioning. We focus on chatter in the physical sectioning process, principally characterizing it by its geometric and optical attributes. Some important nonlinear dynamical models of chatter in the sectioning process, drawn from the metal machining literature, are introduced and compared with observed measurements of chatter in the tissue cutting process. To understand the effects of the embedding polymer on tissue sectioning, we discuss methods to characterize the polymer material and present polymer measurements. Image processing techniques are introduced as a method to abate chatter artifacts in the volumetric data that has already been obtained. Ultra-precise machining techniques, using (1) free-form nanomachining and (2) an oscillating knife, are introduced as potential ways to acquire chatter-free higher-resolution volumetric data in less time. Finally, conclusions of our study and future work conclude the thesis. In this thesis, we conclude that to achieve ultrathin sectioning and high-resolution imaging, embedded plastic should be soft. To overcome the machining defects of soft plastics, we suggested free-form nanomachining and sectioning with an oscillating knife.
4

Manipulations acoustiques de cellules pour l'ingénierie tissulaire / Acoustic cells manipulation for tissue engineering

Bouyer, Charlène 07 December 2015 (has links)
Manipuler génétiquement ou physiquement des cellules présente un très grand intérêt pour l'ingénierie tissulaire mais soulève encore de nombreux challenges. Les technologies actuelles pour la fabrication de tissus, comme l'assemblage de micro-gels, le remplissage de matrice 3D, le modelage ou l'impression biocompatible sont limités dans leur capacité à organiser spatialement des cellules, souffrent d'un temps de manipulation conséquent, d'effets secondaires potentiellement cytotoxiques et d'une grande complexité de mise en œuvre, empêchant leur utilisation à grande échelle. Nous nous sommes intéressés dans cette thèse à développer des techniques biocompatibles, faciles à implémenter, rapides et facilement transférables dans des laboratoires de biologie. Nous les avons orientées vers deux applications stimulantes car en grand essor et pour lesquelles les techniques actuelles ne permettent pas encore une utilisation grande échelle : la réparation osseuse et l'ingénierie tissulaire neuronale / Genetic or physical cells manipulation aspires to be new challenges in tissue engineering. Current technologies to generate tissues, such as micro-scale hydrogels (microgel) assembly, scaffold seeding, molding or bio-printing suffer from the difficulty to control cells organization, multi-steps time consuming procedures and/or potentially cytotoxic side effects. In this PhD, we aimed at developing cell-friendly and rapid techniques, easily transferable to biological laboratories, for two broadly challenging applications: bone healing and neural tissue engineering, for which the above-mentioned techniques cannot yet provide widely reliable models. In case of a bone critical size defect, external help is often needed for bone healing, and gold-standard for care is bone autograft. Alternatively, the fracture healing process can be stimulated and restored by the implantation at the fracture site of hydrogels embedding growth factors. Both technologies suffer however from side effects such as donor site morbidity or cells over-proliferation in the hydrogel proximity. Moreover, the kinetic of growth factors release cannot be temporally controlled. In this work, we aim at developing an alternative method using ultrasound to spatially and temporally control growth factors release within a biocompatible material: fibrin hydrogels. Towards this goal, we encapsulated, in lipoplexes, plasmids that are under the control of a heat-shock promoter. We then transfected cells, stimulate the production of the targeted protein by heat shock and reported its expression. We also optimized an encapsulation protocol for cells within fibrin gels. This proof of concept demonstrates the feasibility of transfection by lipoplexes with a plasmid under control of heat shock, and pave the way for future developments of in situ transfection of autologous cells, for a tight temporal and spatial control of therapeutic proteins expression using ultrasound-induced hyperthermia
5

The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development

Nguyen, Hoa Bich 07 October 2013 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Cervical cancer is caused by the persistent infection of human papilloma virus (HPV) in the cervix epithelium. Although effective preventative care is available, the widespread nature of infection and the variety of HPV strains unprotected by HPV vaccines necessitate a better understanding of the disease for development of new therapies. A major tumor suppressing mechanism is the inhibition of cell division by tissue structure; however, the underlining molecular circuitry for this regulation remains unclear. Recently, the Yap transcriptional co-activator has emerged as a key growth promoter that mediates contact growth arrest and limits organ size. Thus, we aimed to uncover upstream signals that connect tissue organization to Yap regulation in the inhibition of cervical cancer. Two events that disrupt tissue structure were examined including the loss of the tumor suppressor LKB1 and the expression of the viral oncogene HPV16-E6. We identified that Yap mediates cell growth regulation downstream of both LKB1 and E6. Restoration of LKB1 expression in HeLa cervical cancer cells, which lack this tumor suppressor, or shRNA knockdown of LKB1 in NTERT immortalized normal human dermal keratinocytes, demonstrated that LKB1 promotes Yap phosphorylation, nuclear exclusion, and proteasomal degradation. The ability of phosphorylation-defective Yap mutants to rescue LKB1 phenotypes, such as reduced cell proliferation and cell size, suggest that Yap inhibition contributes to LKB1 tumor suppressor function(s). Interestingly, LKB1’s suppression of Yap activity required neither the canonical Yap kinases, Lats1/2, nor metabolic downstream targets of LKB1, AMPK and mTORC1. Instead, the scaffolding protein NF2 was required for LKB1 to induce a specific actin cytoskeleton structure that associates with Yap suppression. Meanwhile, HPV16-E6 promoted Yap activation in all stages of keratinocyte differentiation. E6 activated the Rap1 small GTPase, which in turn promoted Yap activity. Since Rap1 does not mediate differentiation inhibition caused by E6, E6 may play a role in promoting cell growth through Rap1-Yap activation rather than preventing growth arrest through the disruption of differentiation. Altogether, the LKB1-NF2-Yap and E6-Rap1-Yap pathways represent two examples of a novel phenomenon, whereby the structure of a cell directly influences its gene expression and proliferation.

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