McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering
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Flow-based microfluidic device for quantifying bacterial chemotaxis in stable, competing gradients.
Applied and environmental microbiology Jul, 2009 | Pubmed ID: 19411425
Microfluidic techniques for the analysis of bacterial chemotaxis.
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) , 2009 | Pubmed ID: 19763956
Repellent taxis in response to nickel ion requires neither Ni2+ transport nor the periplasmic NikA binding protein.
Journal of bacteriology May, 2010 | Pubmed ID: 20233931
Investigation of bacterial chemotaxis in flow-based microfluidic devices.
Nature protocols , 2010 | Pubmed ID: 20431532
Chemotaxis to the quorum-sensing signal AI-2 requires the Tsr chemoreceptor and the periplasmic LsrB AI-2-binding protein.
Journal of bacteriology Feb, 2011 | Pubmed ID: 21097621
Texas A&M University
Derek L. Englert1,
Michael D. Manson2,
Arul Jayaraman1,3
1McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering, Texas A&M University,
2Department of Biology, Texas A&M University,
3Department of Biomedical Engineering, Texas A&M University
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