67 research outputs found

    Aspects of Model Interaction in Mechanized Tunneling

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    ABSTRACT Underground infrastructures are becoming increasingly important components of modern traffic concepts worldwide. This includes, in particular, investigations of the stability of tunnel faces, material models for subsoil behavior, damage analysis of tunnel linings and supports as well as process-oriented simulation models for mechanized shield driving. Due to the strong interaction between the individual tasks in mechanized tunneling, the exchange of data and the interplay of components in simulation, the Collaborative Research Center SFB 837 has been established at the Ruhr-University of Bochum. In this paper a brief overview on the 14 sub-projects in the SFB 837 addressing one of the characteristic research areas in underground engineering is given. The main part of the paper deals with key sub-projects solely dedicated to the computer-supported integration, visualization and interaction of related models and information

    Activation of the γ-Tubulin Complex by the Mto1/2 Complex

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    SummaryThe multisubunit γ-tubulin complex (γ-TuC) is critical for microtubule nucleation in eukaryotic cells [1, 2], but it remains unclear how the γ-TuC becomes active specifically at microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs) and not more broadly throughout the cytoplasm [3, 4]. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, the proteins Mto1 and Mto2 form the Mto1/2 complex, which interacts with the γ-TuC and recruits it to several different types of cytoplasmic MTOC sites [5–10]. Here, we show that the Mto1/2 complex activates γ-TuC-dependent microtubule nucleation independently of localizing the γ-TuC. This was achieved through the construction of a “minimal” version of Mto1/2, Mto1/2[bonsai], that does not localize to any MTOC sites. By direct imaging of individual Mto1/2[bonsai] complexes nucleating single microtubules in vivo, we further determine the number and stoichiometry of Mto1, Mto2, and γ-TuC subunits Alp4 (GCP2) and Alp6 (GCP3) within active nucleation complexes. These results are consistent with active nucleation complexes containing ∼13 copies each of Mto1 and Mto2 per active complex and likely equimolar amounts of γ-tubulin. Additional experiments suggest that Mto1/2 multimers act to multimerize the fission yeast γ-tubulin small complex and that multimerization of Mto2 in particular may underlie assembly of active microtubule nucleation complexes
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