12,604 research outputs found
Trains, tails and loops of partially adsorbed semi-flexible filaments
Polymer adsorption is a fundamental problem in statistical mechanics that has
direct relevance to diverse disciplines ranging from biological lubrication to
stability of colloidal suspensions. We combine experiments with computer
simulations to investigate depletion induced adsorption of semi-flexible
polymers onto a hard-wall. Three dimensional filament configurations of
partially adsorbed F-actin polymers are visualized with total internal
reflection fluorescence microscopy. This information is used to determine the
location of the adsorption/desorption transition and extract the statistics of
trains, tails and loops of partially adsorbed filament configurations. In
contrast to long flexible filaments which primarily desorb by the formation of
loops, the desorption of stiff, finite-sized filaments is largely driven by
fluctuating filament tails. Simulations quantitatively reproduce our
experimental data and allow us to extract universal laws that explain scaling
of the adsorption-desorption transition with relevant microscopic parameters.
Our results demonstrate how the adhesion strength, filament stiffness, length,
as well as the configurational space accessible to the desorbed filament can be
used to design the characteristics of filament adsorption and thus engineer
properties of composite biopolymeric materials
Light scattering study of the “pseudo-layer” compression elastic constant in a twist-bend nematic liquid crystal
The nematic twist-bend (TB) phase, exhibited by certain achiral thermotropic liquid crystalline (LC) dimers, features a nanometer-scale, heliconical rotation of the average molecular long axis (director) with equally probable left- and right-handed domains. On meso to macroscopic scales, the TB phase may be considered as a stack of equivalent slabs or “pseudo-layers”, each one helical pitch in thickness. The long wavelength fluctuation modes should then be analogous to those of a smectic-A phase, and in particular the hydrodynamic mode combining “layer” compression and bending ought to be characterized by an effective layer compression elastic constant Beff and average director splay constant Keff1. The magnitude of Keff1 is expected to be similar to the splay constant of an ordinary nematic LC, but due to the absence of a true mass density wave, Beff could differ substantially from the typical value of ∼10⁶ Pa in a conventional smectic-A. Here we report the results of a dynamic light scattering study, which confirms the “pseudo-layer” structure of the TB phase with Beff in the range 10³–10⁴ Pa. We show additionally that the temperature dependence of Beff at the TB to nematic transition is accurately described by a coarse-grained free energy density, which is based on a Landau-deGennes expansion in terms of a heli-polar order parameter that characterizes the TB state and is linearly coupled to bend distortion of the director
A Metabolic Dependency for Host Isoprenoids in the Obligate Intracellular Pathogen Rickettsia parkeri Underlies a Sensitivity to the Statin Class of Host-Targeted Therapeutics.
Gram-negative bacteria in the order Rickettsiales have an obligate intracellular growth requirement, and some species cause human diseases such as typhus and spotted fever. The bacteria have evolved a dependence on essential nutrients and metabolites from the host cell as a consequence of extensive genome reduction. However, it remains largely unknown which nutrients they acquire and whether their metabolic dependency can be exploited therapeutically. Here, we describe a genetic rewiring of bacterial isoprenoid biosynthetic pathways in the Rickettsiales that has resulted from reductive genome evolution. Furthermore, we investigated whether the spotted fever group Rickettsia species Rickettsia parkeri scavenges isoprenoid precursors directly from the host. Using targeted mass spectrometry, we found that infection caused decreases in host isoprenoid products and concomitant increases in bacterial isoprenoid metabolites. Additionally, we report that treatment of infected cells with statins, which inhibit host isoprenoid synthesis, prohibited bacterial growth. We show that growth inhibition correlates with changes in bacterial size and shape that mimic those caused by antibiotics that inhibit peptidoglycan biosynthesis, suggesting that statins lead to an inhibition of cell wall synthesis. Altogether, our results describe a potential Achilles' heel of obligate intracellular pathogens that can potentially be exploited with host-targeted therapeutics that interfere with metabolic pathways required for bacterial growth.IMPORTANCE Obligate intracellular pathogens, which include viruses as well as certain bacteria and eukaryotes, are a subset of infectious microbes that are metabolically dependent on and unable to grow outside an infected host cell because they have lost or lack essential biosynthetic pathways. In this study, we describe a metabolic dependency of the bacterial pathogen Rickettsia parkeri on host isoprenoid molecules that are used in the biosynthesis of downstream products, including cholesterol, steroid hormones, and heme. Bacteria make products from isoprenoids, such as an essential lipid carrier for making the bacterial cell wall. We show that bacterial metabolic dependency can represent a potential Achilles' heel and that inhibiting host isoprenoid biosynthesis with the FDA-approved statin class of drugs inhibits bacterial growth by interfering with the integrity of the cell wall. This work supports the potential to treat infections by obligate intracellular pathogens through inhibition of host biosynthetic pathways that are susceptible to parasitism
Combined Use of Oscillating Means and Ellipsometry to Determine Uncorrelated Effective Thickness and Optical Constants of Material Deposited From a Fluid
A combined ellipsometer and oscillator system applied to a chamber for containing fluid, and method of decorrelated determination of thickness and optical constants of depostable materials present in a fluid. In use the ellipsometer determines the product of thickness and optical constant, and the oscillator system changes frequency of oscillation proportional to the thickness of material deposited upon a surface of an element therein
A Bayesian approach to the follow-up of candidate gravitational wave signals
Ground-based gravitational wave laser interferometers (LIGO, GEO-600, Virgo
and Tama-300) have now reached high sensitivity and duty cycle. We present a
Bayesian evidence-based approach to the search for gravitational waves, in
particular aimed at the followup of candidate events generated by the analysis
pipeline. We introduce and demonstrate an efficient method to compute the
evidence and odds ratio between different models, and illustrate this approach
using the specific case of the gravitational wave signal generated during the
inspiral phase of binary systems, modelled at the leading quadrupole Newtonian
order, in synthetic noise. We show that the method is effective in detecting
signals at the detection threshold and it is robust against (some types of)
instrumental artefacts. The computational efficiency of this method makes it
scalable to the analysis of all the triggers generated by the analysis
pipelines to search for coalescing binaries in surveys with ground-based
interferometers, and to a whole variety of signal waveforms, characterised by a
larger number of parameters.Comment: 9 page
Hall-Effect for Neutral Atoms
It is shown that polarizable neutral systems can drift in crossed magnetic
and electric fileds. The drift velocity is perpendicular to both fields, but
contrary to the drif t velocity of a charged particle, it exists only, if
fields vary in space or in time. We develop an adiabatic theory of this
phenomenon and analyze conditions of its experimental observation. The most
proper objects for the observation of this effect are Rydberg atoms. It can be
applied for the separation of excited atoms.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages; to be published in Pis'ma v ZhET
Discovery of Five New R Coronae Borealis Stars in the MACHO Galactic Bulge Database
We have identified five new R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars in the Galactic
bulge using the MACHO Project photometry database, raising the total number of
known Galactic RCB stars to about 40. We have obtained spectra to confirm the
identifications. The fact that four out of the five newly identified RCB stars
are ``cool'' (T(eff) 6000 K) suggests
that the preponderance of warm RCB stars among the existing sample is a
selection bias. These cool RCB stars are redder and fainter than their warm
counterparts and may have been missed in surveys done with blue plates. Based
on the number of new RCB stars discovered in the MACHO bulge fields, there may
be ~250 RCB stars in the reddened "exclusion" zone toward the bulge.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, AJ in press High resolution versions of Figures
1 and 2 can be downloaded from
http://morpheus.phys.lsu.edu/~gclayton/figs.pdf (more typos corrected
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