Spatial localization of bacteria controls coagulation of human blood by 'quorum acting'
Christian J. Kastrup(University of British Columbia), Rustem F. Ismagilov(California Institute of Technology), Timothy R. Kline(University of Chicago), Wei‐Jen Tang(May Institute), Stephen H. Leppla(National Institutes of Health), Feng Shen(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Patricia Sylvestre(Institut Pasteur), James Q. Boedicker(University of Southern California), Andrei P. Pomerantsev(National Institutes of Health), Rebecca R. Pompano(University of Virginia), Yao Bian(University of Chicago), Mahtab Moayeri(National Institutes of Health)
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