Publications
Browse peer-reviewed literature, posters, webinars, blog articles, and more showing how we and others are using RepliGut Systems to support discovery.
2018
Gunasekara, Dulan B.; Speer, Jennifer; Wang, Yuli; Nguyen, Daniel L.; Reed, Mark I.; Smiddy, Nicole M.; Parker, Joel S.; Fallon, John K.; Smith, Philip C.; Sims, Christopher E.; Magness, Scott T.; Allbritton, Nancy L.
A monolayer of primary colonic epithelium generated on a scaffold with a gradient of stiffness for drug transport studies Journal Article
In: vol. 90, no. 22, pp. 13331, 2018, (Publisher: NIH Public Access).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Atenolol, Biological Transport, Caco-2 Cells, Colon, Epithelium, Humans, Propranolol, Riboflavin, Tissue Engineering
@article{gunasekara_monolayer_2018,
title = {A monolayer of primary colonic epithelium generated on a scaffold with a gradient of stiffness for drug transport studies},
author = {Dulan B. Gunasekara and Jennifer Speer and Yuli Wang and Daniel L. Nguyen and Mark I. Reed and Nicole M. Smiddy and Joel S. Parker and John K. Fallon and Philip C. Smith and Christopher E. Sims and Scott T. Magness and Nancy L. Allbritton},
url = {https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6339567/},
doi = {10.1021/acs.analchem.8b02845},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-11-11},
urldate = {2018-11-11},
volume = {90},
number = {22},
pages = {13331},
abstract = {Animal models are frequently used for in vitro physiologic and drug transport studies of the colon, but there exists significant pressure to improve assay throughput as well as achieve tighter control of experimental variables than can be achieved with ...},
note = {Publisher: NIH Public Access},
keywords = {Atenolol, Biological Transport, Caco-2 Cells, Colon, Epithelium, Humans, Propranolol, Riboflavin, Tissue Engineering},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Animal models are frequently used for in vitro physiologic and drug transport studies of the colon, but there exists significant pressure to improve assay throughput as well as achieve tighter control of experimental variables than can be achieved with ...