“…In 1970s, a well-known chemotaxis model was proposed by Keller and Segel ([13]), which describes the aggregation processes of the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum. Since then, a number of variations of the Keller-Segel model have attracted the attention of many mathematicians, and the focused issue was the boundedness or blow-up of the solutions ( [5,7,9,10,39,20]). The striking feature of Keller-Segel models is the possibility of blow-up of solutions in a finite (or infinite) time (see, e.g., [1,9,18,39]), which strongly depends on the space dimension.…”