Cell induction/differentiation
General cell lines, especially tumor cell lines, are heterogeneous, which leads to the fact that the data obtained through cell experiments often cannot truly reflect the cell characteristics and biological functions of the research object. In order to keep the consistency of the research object as much as possible, the cell group can be adjusted to a relatively consistent state by cell induction or cell differentiation, so as to improve the credibility of the experimental results. Cell differentiation refers to the gradual production of cell groups with different morphological structure and functional characteristics from cells derived from the same source. As a result, there are cell differences in space, and the same cell is different from its previous state in time. The essence of cell differentiation lies in the selective expression of the genome in time and space, and the expression of different genes is turned on or off, and finally the landmark proteins are formed. Cell induction is the process of transforming a group of cells of different types or structures into a group of cells with similar/identical morphological structure and functional characteristics by means of biology and physics.
Technical principle
General cell lines, especially tumor cell lines, are heterogeneous, which leads to the fact that the data obtained through cell experiments often cannot truly reflect the cell characteristics and biological functions of the research object. In order to keep the consistency of the research object as much as possible, the cell group can be adjusted to a relatively consistent state by cell induction or cell differentiation, so as to improve the credibility of the experimental results. Cell differentiation refers to the gradual production of cell groups with different morphological structure and functional characteristics from cells derived from the same source. As a result, there are cell differences in space, and the same cell is different from its previous state in time. The essence of cell differentiation lies in the selective expression of the genome in time and space, and the expression of different genes is turned on or off, and finally the landmark proteins are formed. Cell induction is the process of transforming a group of cells of different types or structures into a group of cells with similar/identical morphological structure and functional characteristics by means of biology and physics.
Real Experimental Research Hundreds of Detection Experiments 6 Experimental Platforms









