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Microscopy suggested that the mode of cell death was lysis.
In addition, magnetic force microscopy suggested that spin domains were formed in the obtained systems.
Besides, confocal microscopy suggested that the polyplexes formed from these polymers could escape from endosome/lysosome more efficiently than those derived from PEGylated material.
The single glass transition temperature Tg and the absence of evidence for phase separation in scanning electron microscopy suggested that these systems formed so-called 'molecular composites'.
Evidence from dynamic mechanical analysis and phase-contrast microscopy suggested that these blends were heterogeneous, with the PP phase being continuous.
Older observations, which were based solely on light microscopy, suggested that the main stages of oogenesis such as yolk uptake, take place outside the ovary, i.e. in the body or the ovisac cavity in some groups of clitellate annelids.
Similar(41)
Triple-color microscopy suggests that two factors interact to initiate actin formation and then separate as the filament grows.
Dynamic mechanical behavior and electron microscopy suggest that a complex mutiphase structure is produced, particularly at low PDMS weight fractions.
The pattern of the primary particles, observed under scanning electron microscopy, suggests that these particles results from a spherulitic crystal growth mechanism inside the droplet.
Studies using force spectroscopy, flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy suggest that the bioactive fragments of pectin may be pectin-derived galactans.
PP crystal lamellae in rubber particles in a well-annealed sample were observed by transmission electron microscopy, suggesting that PP had been occluded in the rubber phase.
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