1st Edition

The Physiology of Bioelectricity in Development, Tissue Regeneration and Cancer

Edited By Christine E. Pullar Copyright 2011
344 Pages 70 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

344 Pages 70 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

344 Pages
by CRC Press

Recent advances in technology have led to the unprecedented accuracy in measurements of endogenous electric fields around sites of tissue disruption. State-of-the-art molecular approaches demonstrate the role of bioelectricity in the directionality and speed of cell migration, proliferation, apoptosis, differentiation, and orientation. New information indicates that electric fields play a role in... Read more

Measuring Endogenous Electric Fields, R. Nuccitelli

Investigation Systems to Study the Biological Effects of Weak Physiological Electric Fields, F.X. Hart

Endogenous Bioelectric Signals as Morphogenetic Controls of Development, Regeneration, and Neoplasm, M. Levin

Stem Cell Physiological Responses to Noninvasive Electrical Stimulation, I. Titushkin, S. Sun, V. Rao, and M. Cho

Electrical Signals Control Corneal Epithelial Cell Physiology and Wound Repair, C.D. McCaig

Physiological Electric Fields Can Direct Keratinocyte Migration and Promote Healing in Chronic Wounds, C.E. Pullar

Electrical Control of Angiogenesis, E. Wang, Y. Yin, H. Bai, B. Reid, Z. Zhao, and M. Zhao

Inflammatory Cell Electrotaxis, F. Lin and C.E. Pullar

Effects of DC Electric Fields on Migration of Cells of the Musculoskeletal System, N.J. Gunja, C.T. Hung, and J.C. Bulinski

Neuronal Growth Cone Guidance by Physiological DC Electric Fields, A.M. Rajnicek

Can Applied Voltages Be Used to Produce Spinal Cord Regeneration and Recovery in Humans? R.B. Borgens

Bioelectricty of Cancer: Voltage-Gated Ion Channels and Direct-Current Electric Fields, M.B.A. Djamgoz

Biography

Christine E. Pullar is a lecturer at the University of Leicester in the UK. She received her Ph.D. in immune cell signal transduction from the University of Sheffield, UK. The Wellcome Trust, the Medical Research Council, and the British Skin Foundation currently fund her lab. Her work has a strong translational flair, including projects that aim to promote healing in chronic wounds and reduce wound scarring, and she hold several patents in this area. She has delivered invited lectures at more than 20 international meetings and is active in mentoring young scientists within the research community.