2,253 research outputs found
Tubulin subunit carboxyl termini determine polymerization efficiency
Cleavage of tubulin by subtilisin removes a small (Mr < 2000) fragment from the C-terminal end of both α and β subunits. The resulting protein is much reduced in negative charge. The cleaved, less acidic protein retains its competence to polymerize in a GTP-dependent and cold-, GDP-, and podophyllotoxin-sensitive manner and assembles into sheets or bundles of twisted filaments. The critical concentration for polymerization of the cleaved protein is about 50-fold lower than that for intact tubulin. It is proposed that the C termini of the subunits normally impede polymerization
Tubulin, hybrid dimers, and tubulin S. Stepwise charge reduction and polymerization
Limited proteolysis of rat brain tubulin (αβ) by subtilisin cleaves a 1-2-kDa fragment from the carboxyl-terminal ends of both the α and β subunits with a corresponding loss in negative charge of the proteins. The β subunit is split much more rapidly (and exclusively at 5 ° C), yielding a protein with cleaved β and intact α subunit, called α βs, which is of intermediate charge. Further proteolysis cleaves the carboxyl terminus of the α subunit leading, irreversibly, to the doubly cleaved product, named tubulin S, with a composition α s β s. Both cleavage products are polymerization-competent and their polymers are resistant to 1 mM Ca2+- and 0.24 M NaCl-induced depolymerization. The two polymers differ in that the αβs polymer is stable to cold, GDP, and podophyllotoxin, whereas tubulin S polymer is disassembled by these agents; moreover, αβs forms ring-shaped polymers, whereas αsβs forms filaments associated into bundles and sheets. Tubulin S co-polymerizes with native tubulin yielding a mixed product of intermediate stability. The presence of low mole fractions of tubulin S leads to a marked reduction in the critical concentration for polymerization of the mixture
Youâre Having Fun When Time Flies: The Hedonic Consequences of Subjective Time Progression
Seven studies tested the hypothesis that people use subjective time progression in hedonic evaluation. When people believe that time has passed unexpectedly quickly, they rate tasks as more engaging, noises as less irritating, and songs as more enjoyable. We propose that felt time distortion operates as a metacognitive cue that people implicitly attribute to their enjoyment of an experience (i.e., time flew, so the experience must have been fun). Consistent with this attribution account, the effects of felt time distortion on enjoyment ratings were moderated by the need for attribution, the strength of the âtime fliesâ naive theory, and the presence of an alternative attribution. These findings suggest a previously unexplored process through which subjective time progression can influence the hedonic evaluation of experiences
A Neutral Hydrogen Survey of Polar-Ring Galaxies: I. Green Bank Observations of the Northern Sample
We present the results of a neutral hydrogen survey conducted with the Green
Bank 140-foot radio telescope of 47 northern objects in the polar-ring galaxy
atlas of Whitmore \etal\ (1990). We detected 39 of these above our detection
limit of 1.7 \hbox{Jy\CDOT\KMS}; the average measured flux of 21 Jy\CDOT\KMS\
corresponds to an average neutral hydrogen mass of \MSUN
for a Hubble constant of \KMS \ Mpc. For the polar-ring
galaxies in our sample that have also been observed with radio arrays, we find
that the 21\AMIN\ (FWHM) Green Bank beam often includes much more flux than
found by the synthesis instruments for the polar rings alone; some of these
galaxies are known to have gas-rich companions. We compare the neutral hydrogen
content of the sample to the blue luminosity and IRAS fluxes. The \HI-to-blue-
light ratios of the confirmed and probable polar rings are around unity in
solar units, indicating that polar ring galaxies (or their environments) are as
gas-rich as typical irregular galaxies. For their blue luminosity, the
confirmed polar rings are underluminous in the far-infrared, as compared with
the rest of the sample. They are also FIR-underluminous for their \HI\ masses,
which suggests that most of the gas in the ring may be in stable orbits, rather
than flowing inward to trigger star formation in the central galaxy. The more
disordered class of `related objects,' which includes a number of obvious
mergers, is highly luminous in the far-infrared.Comment: 34 pages, LaTeX file, Institute for Advanced Study number AST 93/4
Realistic Earth escape strategies for solar sailing
With growing interest in solar sailing comes the requirement to provide a basis for future detailed planetary escape mission analysis by drawing together prior work, clarifying and explaining previously anomalies. Previously unexplained seasonal variations in sail escape times from Earth orbit are explained analytically and corroborated within a numerical trajectory model. Blended-sail control algorithms, explicitly independent of time, which providenear-optimal escape trajectories and maintain a safe minimum altitude and which are suitable as a potential autonomous onboard controller, are then presented. These algorithms are investigated from a range of initial conditions and are shown to maintain the optimality previously demonstrated by the use of a single-energy gain control law but without the risk of planetary collision. Finally, it is shown that the minimum sail characteristic acceleration required for escape from a polar orbit without traversing the Earth shadow cone increases exponentially as initial altitude is decreased
Entangling many atomic ensembles through laser manipulation
We propose an experimentally feasible scheme to generate
Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) type of maximal entanglement between many
atomic ensembles based on laser manipulation and single-photon detection. The
scheme, with inherent fault tolerance to the dominant noise and efficient
scaling of the efficiency with the number of ensembles, allows to maximally
entangle many atomic ensemble within the reach of current technology. Such a
maximum entanglement of many ensembles has wide applications in demonstration
of quantum nonlocality, high-precision spectroscopy, and quantum information
processing.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Generation of eigenstates using the phase-estimation algorithm
The phase estimation algorithm is so named because it allows the estimation
of the eigenvalues associated with an operator. However it has been proposed
that the algorithm can also be used to generate eigenstates. Here we extend
this proposal for small quantum systems, identifying the conditions under which
the phase estimation algorithm can successfully generate eigenstates. We then
propose an implementation scheme based on an ion trap quantum computer. This
scheme allows us to illustrate two simple examples, one in which the algorithm
effectively generates eigenstates, and one in which it does not.Comment: 5 pages, 3 Figures, RevTeX4 Introduction expanded, typos correcte
Fertilization in C. elegans requires an intact C-terminal RING finger in sperm protein SPE-42
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The <it>C. elegans </it>sperm protein SPE-42, a membrane protein of unknown structure and molecular function, is required for fertilization. Sperm from worms with <it>spe-42 </it>mutations appear normal but are unable to fertilize eggs. Sequence analysis revealed the presence of 8 conserved cysteine residues in the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of this protein suggesting these residues form a zinc-coordinating RING finger structure.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We made an <it>in silico </it>structural model of the SPE-42 RING finger domain based on primary sequence analysis and previously reported RING structures. To test the model, we created <it>spe-42 </it>transgenes coding for mutations in each of the 8 cysteine residues predicted to coordinate Zn<sup>++ </sup>ions in the RING finger motif. Transgenes were crossed into a <it>spe-42 </it>null background and protein function was measured by counting progeny. We found that all 8 cysteines are required for protein function. We also showed that sequence differences between the C-terminal 29 and 30 amino acids in <it>C. elegans </it>and <it>C. briggsae </it>SPE-42 following the RING finger domain are not responsible for the failure of the <it>C. briggsae </it>SPE-42 homolog to rescue <it>C. elegans spe-42 </it>mutants.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The results suggest that a <it>bona fide </it>RING domain is present at the C-terminus of the SPE-42 protein and that this motif is required for sperm-egg interactions during <it>C. elegans </it>fertilization. Our structural model of the RING domain provides a starting point for further structure-function analysis of this critical region of the protein. The C-terminal domain swap experiment suggests that the incompatibility between the <it>C. elegans </it>and <it>C. briggsae </it>SPE-42 proteins is caused by small amino acid differences outside the C-terminal domain.</p
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