100 research outputs found
Sub Decoherence Time Generation and Detection of Orbital Entanglement
Recent experiments have demonstrated sub decoherence time control of
individual single-electron orbital qubits. Here we propose a quantum dot based
scheme for generation and detection of pairs of orbitally entangled electrons
on a timescale much shorter than the decoherence time. The electrons are
entangled, via two-particle interference, and transferred to the detectors
during a single cotunneling event, making the scheme insensitive to charge
noise. For sufficiently long detector dot lifetimes, cross-correlation
detection of the dot charges can be performed with real-time counting
techniques, opening up for an unambiguous short-time Bell inequality test of
orbital entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 3 pages supplemental materia
Nanoscale Quantum Calorimetry with Electronic Temperature Fluctuations
Motivated by the recent development of fast and ultra-sensitive thermometry
in nanoscale systems, we investigate quantum calorimetric detection of
individual heat pulses in the sub-meV energy range. We propose a hybrid
superconducting injector-calorimeter set-up, with the energy of injected pulses
carried by tunneling electrons. Treating all heat transfer events
microscopically, we analyse the statistics of the calorimeter temperature
fluctuations and derive conditions for an accurate measurement of the heat
pulse energies. Our results pave the way for novel, fundamental quantum
thermodynamics experiments, including calorimetric detection of single
microwave photons.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures plus supplemental material, 8 pages, 1 figur
Towards Protein Crystallization as a Process Step in Downstream Processing of Therapeutic Antibodies: Screening and Optimization at Microbatch Scale
Crystallization conditions of an intact monoclonal IgG4 (immunoglobulin G, subclass 4) antibody were established in vapor diffusion mode by sparse matrix screening and subsequent optimization. The procedure was transferred to microbatch conditions and a phase diagram was built showing surprisingly low solubility of the antibody at equilibrium. With up-scaling to process scale in mind, purification efficiency of the crystallization step was investigated. Added model protein contaminants were excluded from the crystals to more than 95%. No measurable loss of Fc-binding activity was observed in the crystallized and redissolved antibody. Conditions could be adapted to crystallize the antibody directly from concentrated and diafiltrated cell culture supernatant, showing purification efficiency similar to that of Protein A chromatography. We conclude that crystallization has the potential to be included in downstream processing as a low-cost purification or formulation step
The Mechanism of Enhanced Insulin Amyloid Fibril Formation by NaCl Is Better Explained by a Conformational Change Model
The high propensity of insulin to fibrillate causes severe biomedical and biotechnological complications. Insulin fibrillation studies attain significant importance considering the prevalence of diabetes and the requirement of functional insulin in each dose. Although studied since the early years of the 20th century, elucidation of the mechanism of insulin fibrillation has not been understood completely. We have previously, through several studies, shown that insulin hexamer dissociates into monomer that undergoes partial unfolding before converting into mature fibrils. In this study we have established that NaCl enhances insulin fibrillation mainly due to subtle structural changes and is not a mere salt effect. We have carried out studies both in the presence and absence of urea and Gdn.HCl and compared the relationship between conformation of insulin induced by urea and Gdn.HCl with respect to NaCl at both pH 7.4 (hexamer) and pH 2 (monomer). Fibril formation was followed with a Thioflavin T assay and structural changes were monitored by circular dichroism and size-exclusion chromatography. The results show salt-insulin interactions are difficult to classify as commonly accepted Debye-Hückel or Hofmeister series interactions but instead a strong correlation between the association states and conformational states of insulin and their propensity to fibrillate is evident
Mapping the Conformational Dynamics and Pathways of Spontaneous Steric Zipper Peptide Oligomerization
The process of protein misfolding and self-assembly into various, polymorphic aggregates is associated with a number of important neurodegenerative diseases. Only recently, crystal structures of several short peptides have provided detailed structural insights into -sheet rich aggregates, known as amyloid fibrils. Knowledge about early events of the formation and interconversion of small oligomeric states, an inevitable step in the cascade of peptide self-assembly, however, remains still limited
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