Publications of Dimitris Missirlis
All genres
Journal Article (12)
1.
Journal Article
2, pp. 486 - 500 (2024)
Ultrasound-assisted tissue engineering. Nature Reviews Bioengineering 2.
Journal Article
18 (12), pp. 8919 - 8933 (2024)
Designed ankyrin repeat proteins as actin labels of distinct cytoskeletal structures in living cells. ACS Nano 3.
Journal Article
12 (7), 2201748, pp. 1 - 14 (2023)
Amyloid-based albumin hydrogels. Advanced Healthcare Materials 4.
Journal Article
287, 121646, pp. 1 - 11 (2022)
Fibronectin anchoring to viscoelastic poly(dimethylsiloxane) elastomers controls fibroblast mechanosensing and directional motility. Biomaterials 5.
Journal Article
14 (3), pp. 3643 - 3652 (2022)
Facile and versatile method for micropatterning poly(acrylamide) hydrogels using photocleavable comonomers. ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces 6.
Journal Article
133 (1), 232702, pp. 1 - 14 (2020)
Recruitment of integrin ανβ3 to integrin α5β1-induced clusters enables focal adhesion maturation and cell spreading. Journal of Cell Science 7.
Journal Article
13 (2), pp. 1403 - 1411 (2019)
Machine-learning-driven surface-enhanced raman scattering optophysiology reveals multiplexed metabolite gradients near cells. ACS Nano 8.
Journal Article
7, 3711 , pp. 1 - 16 (2017)
Fibronectin promotes directional persistence in fibroblast migration through interactions with both its cell-binding and heparin-binding domains. Scientific Reports 9.
Journal Article
6, 23258 , pp. 1 - 18 (2016)
Substrate engagement of integrins α5β1 and αvβ3 is necessary, but not sufficient, for high directional persistence in migration on fibronectin. Scientific Reports 10.
Journal Article
9 (5), e96548, pp. 1 - 18 (2014)
The effect of substrate elasticity and actomyosin contractility on different forms of endocytosis. PLoS One 11.
Journal Article
15 (1), pp. 195 - 205 (2014)
Combined effects of PEG hydrogel elasticity and cell-adhesive coating on fibroblast adhesion and persistent migration. Biomacromolecules 12.
Journal Article
8 (1), e54611, pp. 1 - 10 (2013)
The non-peptidic part determines the internalization mechanism and intracellular trafficking of peptide amphiphiles. PLoS One