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Sui Huang

Researcher at Institute for Systems Biology

Publications -  177
Citations -  27031

Sui Huang is an academic researcher from Institute for Systems Biology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene regulatory network & Population. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 162 publications receiving 24885 citations. Previous affiliations of Sui Huang include Harvard University & Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics.

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Geometric control of cell life and death.

TL;DR: Human and bovine capillary endothelial cells were switched from growth to apoptosis by using micropatterned substrates that contained extracellular matrix-coated adhesive islands of decreasing size to progressively restrict cell extension.
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Immune response in mice that lack the interferon-gamma receptor.

TL;DR: Mutant mice offer the possibility for the further elucidation of IFN-gamma-mediated functions by transgenic cell- or tissue-specific reconstitution of a functional receptor.
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Transcriptome-wide noise controls lineage choice in mammalian progenitor cells

TL;DR: Clonal heterogeneity of gene expression level is not due to independent noise in the expression of individual genes, but reflects metastable states of a slowly fluctuating transcriptome that is distinct in individual cells and may govern the reversible, stochastic priming of multipotent progenitor cells in cell fate decision.
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The structural and mechanical complexity of cell-growth control.

TL;DR: Recent work is reviewed that reveals the importance of cell binding to the extracellular matrix, and associated changes in cell shape and cytoskeletal tension, to the spatial control of cell-cycle progression.
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Micropatterned Surfaces for Control of Cell Shape, Position, and Function

TL;DR: Progressively restricting bovine and human endothelial cell extension by culturing cells on smaller and smaller micropatterned adhesive islands regulated a transition from growth to apoptosis on a single continuum of cell spreading, thus confirming the central role of cell shape in cell function.