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Dynamic instability responses of the substructure living biological cells in the cytoplasm environment using stress-strain size-dependent theory.

Neda NajaafiMansoureh JamaliMostafa HabibiSeyedehfatemeh SadeghiDong Won JungNarjes Nabipour
Published in: Journal of biomolecular structure & dynamics (2020)
Over the last few years, some novel researches in the field of medical science made a tendency to have a therapy without any complications or side-effects of the disease with the aid of prognosis about the behaviors of the substructure living biological cell. Regarding this issue, nonlinear frequency characteristics of substructure living biological cell in axons with attention to different size effect parameters based on generalized differential quadrature method is presented. Supporting the effects of surrounding cytoplasm and MAP Tau proteins are considered as nonlinear elastic foundation. The Substructure living biological cell are modeled as a moderately thick curved cylindrical nanoshell. The displacement- strain of nonlinearity via Von Karman nonlinear shell theory is obtained. Extended Hamilton's principle is used for obtaining nonlinear equations of the living biological cells and finally, GDQM and PA are presented to obtain large amplitude and nonlinear frequency information of the substructure living biological cell. Based on presented numerical results, increasing the nonlinear MAP tau protein parameter causes to improve the hardening behavior and increase the maximum amplitudes of resonant vibration of the microtubule. The crucial consequence is when the fixed boundary conditions in the microstructure switch to cantilevered, the living part of the cells could manage to have irrational feedback at the broad field of the excitation frequency. The current study has been made into the influences of the NSG parameters, geometrical and physical parameters on the instability of the curved microtubule employing continuum mechanics model.Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.
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