1,058 research outputs found

    Spatial Resonator Solitons

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    Spatial solitons can exist in various kinds of nonlinear optical resonators with and without amplification. In the past years different types of these localized structures such as vortices, bright, dark solitons and phase solitons have been experimentally shown to exist. Many links appear to exist to fields different from optics, such as fluids, phase transitions or particle physics. These spatial resonator solitons are bistable and due to their mobility suggest schemes of information processing not possible with the fixed bistable elements forming the basic ingredient of traditional electronic processing. The recent demonstration of existence and manipulation of spatial solitons in emiconductor microresonators represents a step in the direction of such optical parallel processing applications. We review pattern formation and solitons in a general context, show some proof of principle soliton experiments on slow systems, and describe in more detail the experiments on semiconductor resonator solitons which are aimed at applications.Comment: 15 pages, 32 figure

    PLoS One

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    pH-induced structural changes in bacteriorhodopsin studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy

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    Previous C13-NMR studies showed that two of the four internal aspartic acid residues (Asp-96 and Asp-115) of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) are protonated up to pH = 10, but no accurate pKa of these residues has been determined. In this work, infrared spectroscopy with the attenuated total reflection technique was used to characterize pH-dependent structural changes of ground-state, dark-adapted wild-type bacteriorhodopsin and its mutant (D96N) with aspartic acid-96 replaced by asparagine. Data indicated deprotonation of Asp-96 at high pH (pKa = 11.4 +/- 0.1), but no Asp-115 titration was observed. The analysis of the whole spectral region characteristic to complex conformational changes in the protein showed a more complicated titration with an additional pKa value (pKa1 = 9.3 +/- 0.3 and pKa2 = 11.5 +/- 0.2). Comparison of results obtained for bR and the D96N mutant of bR shows that the pKa approximately 11.5 characterizes not a direct titration of Asp-96 but a protein conformational change that makes Asp-96 accessible to the external medium

    A predictive computational model of the kinetic mechanism of stimulus-induced transducer methylation and feedback regulation through CheY in archaeal phototaxis and chemotaxis

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    BACKGROUND: Photo- and chemotaxis of the archaeon Halobacterium salinarum is based on the control of flagellar motor switching through stimulus-specific methyl-accepting transducer proteins that relay the sensory input signal to a two-component system. Certain members of the transducer family function as receptor proteins by directly sensing specific chemical or physical stimuli. Others interact with specific receptor proteins like the phototaxis photoreceptors sensory rhodopsin I and II, or require specific binding proteins as for example some chemotaxis transducers. Receptor activation by light or a change in receptor occupancy by chemical stimuli results in reversible methylation of glutamate residues of the transducer proteins. Both, methylation and demethylation reactions are involved in sensory adaptation and are modulated by the response regulator CheY. RESULTS: By mathematical modeling we infer the kinetic mechanisms of stimulus-induced transducer methylation and adaptation. The model (deterministic and in the form of ordinary differential equations) correctly predicts experimentally observed transducer demethylation (as detected by released methanol) in response to attractant and repellent stimuli of wildtype cells, a cheY deletion mutant, and a mutant in which the stimulated transducer species is methylation-deficient. CONCLUSIONS: We provide a kinetic model for signal processing in photo- and chemotaxis in the archaeon H. salinarum suggesting an essential role of receptor cooperativity, antagonistic reversible methylation, and a CheY-dependent feedback on transducer demethylation

    Excited-state reaction dynamics of bacteriorhodopsin studied by femtosecond spectroscopy

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    The photodynamics of bacteriorhodopsin were studied by transient absorption and gain measurements after excitation with femtosecond pulses at 620 nm. With probing pulses at longer wavelengths (λ > 770 nm) the previously reported formation of the J intermediate (with a time constant of 500±100 fs) was confirmed. With probing pulses around 700 nm, a faster process with a relaxation time of 200±70 fs was observed. The data analysis strongly suggests that this kinetic constant describes the reactive motion of the polyatomic molecule on its excited-state potential energy surface, i.e. one observes directly the incipient isomerization of the retinal molecule. The minimum of the S1 potential energy surface reached in 200 fs lies approximately 13300 cm−1 above the ground state of bacteriorhodopsin and from this minimum the intermediate J is formed with a time constant of 500 fs

    Generation of Lasso Peptide-Based ClpP Binders

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    The Clp protease system fulfills a plethora of important functions in bacteria. It consists of a tetradecameric ClpP barrel holding the proteolytic centers and two hexameric Clp-ATPase rings, which recognize, unfold, and then feed substrate proteins into the ClpP barrel for proteolytic degradation. Flexible loops carrying conserved tripeptide motifs protrude from the Clp-ATPases and bind into hydrophobic pockets (H-pockets) on ClpP. Here, we set out to engineer microcin J25 (MccJ25), a ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide (RiPP) of the lasso peptide subfamily, by introducing the conserved tripeptide motifs into the lasso peptide loop region to mimic the Clp-ATPase loops. We studied the capacity of the resulting lasso peptide variants to bind to ClpP and affect its activity. From the nine variants generated, one in particular (12IGF) was able to activate ClpP from Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus subtilis. While 12IGF conferred stability to ClpP tetradecamers and stimulated peptide degradation, it did not trigger unregulated protein degradation, in contrast to the H-pocket-binding acyldepsipeptide antibiotics (ADEPs). Interestingly, synergistic interactions between 12IGF and ADEP were observed

    PLoS Comput. Biol.

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    Conformational relaxation following reduction of the photoactive bacteriopheophytin in reaction centers from Blastochloris viridis. Influence of mutations at position M208

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    AbstractThe photochemically trapped bacteriopheophytin (BPh) b radical anion in the active branch (ΦA−) of reaction centers (RCs) from Blastochloris (formerly called Rhodopseudomonas) viridis is characterized by 1H-ENDOR as well as optical absorption spectroscopy. The two site-directed mutants YF(M208) and YL(M208), in which tyrosine at position M208 is replaced by phenylalanine and leucine, respectively, are investigated and compared with the wild type. The residue at M208 is in close proximity to the primary electron donor, P, the monomeric bacteriochlorophyll (BChl), BA, and the BPh, ΦA, that are involved in the transmembrane electron transfer to the quinone, QA, in the RC. The analysis of the ENDOR spectra of ΦA− at 160 K indicates that two distinct states of ΦA− are present in the wild type and the mutant YF(M208). Based on a comparison with ΦA− in RCs of Rhodobacter sphaeroides the two states are interpreted as torsional isomers of the 3-acetyl group of ΦA. Only one ΦA− state occurs in the mutant YL(M208). This effect of the leucine residue at position M208 is explained by steric hindrance that locks the acetyl group in one specific position. On the basis of these results, an interpretation of the optical absorption difference spectrum of the state ΦA−QA− is attempted. This state can be accumulated at 100 K and undergoes an irreversible change between 100 and 200 K [Tiede et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 892 (1987) 294–302]. The corresponding absorbance changes in the BChl Qx and Qy regions observed in the wild type also occur in the YF(M208) mutant but not in YL(M208). The observed changes in the wild type and YF(M208) are assigned to RCs in which the 3-acetyl group of ΦA changes its orientation. It is concluded that this distinct structural relaxation of ΦA can significantly affect the optical properties of BA and contribute to the light-induced absorption difference spectra

    Fluorescence microscopy visualization of halomucin, a secreted 927 kDa protein surrounding Haloquadratum walsbyi cells

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    At the time of its first publication, halomucin from Haloquadratum walsbyi strain HBSQ001 was the largest archaeal protein known (9159 aa). It has a predicted signal sequence, making it likely to be an extracellular or secreted protein. Best BLAST matches were found to be mammalian mucins that protect tissues to dehydration and chemical stress. It was hypothesized that halomucin participates in protection against desiccation by retaining water in a hull around the halophilic organisms that live at the limits of water activity. We visualized Halo quadratum cells by staining their intracellular polyhydroxybutyrate granules using Nile Blue. Halomucin was stained by immunofluorescence with antibodies generated against synthetic peptides derived from the halomucin amino acid sequence. Polyhydroxybutyrate stained cells were reconstructed in 3D which highlights not only the highly regular square shape but also the extreme flatness of Haloquadratum. Double-staining proves halomucin to be extracellular but to be only loosely associated to cells in agreement with its hypothesized function
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