132 research outputs found
Long Range Protein-Protein Interaction in Membranes
A model of mechanical long range protein-protein interaction
in membranes is proposed: a membrane bound protein may induce
a distortion of the average lipid orientation which may then be
transmitted by the lipid orientational elasticity orer · 1ong distances
to a second protein.· The .elastic force field thus \u27 cre\u27ated may lead
to both attractive and \u27 repulsive forces between the proteins. This
type of interaction· is a special case of the mechanical long range
forces between disclination in ordered fluids. The close analogy
between the lipid mediated protein-protein interaction in membranes
and the attraction between disclination lines in a nematic
layer is illustrated.
The long range interaction between membrane bound macromolecules
may be important for the formation of enzyme complexes
in biological membranes. A further pathway of enzyme-
complex formation in biological membranes is the condensation
of the proteins in small lipid domains that are formed upon thermalor
a charge-induced phase separation in the lipid bilayer. It is
shown that the charge induced domain formation may also provide
a simple mechanism of transverse protein-protein coupling accross
the membrane
Hydrodynamic fluctuations and instabilities in ordered suspensions of self-propelled particles
We construct the hydrodynamic equations for {\em suspensions} of
self-propelled particles (SPPs) with spontaneous orientational order, and make
a number of striking, testable predictions:(i) SPP suspensions with the
symmetry of a true {\em nematic} are {\em always} absolutely unstable at long
wavelengths.(ii) SPP suspensions with {\em polar}, i.e., head-tail {\em
asymmetric}, order support novel propagating modes at long wavelengths,
coupling orientation, flow, and concentration. (iii) In a wavenumber regime
accessible only in low Reynolds number systems such as bacteria, polar-ordered
suspensions are invariably convectively unstable.(iv) The variance in the
number N of particles, divided by the mean , diverges as in
polar-ordered SPP suspensions.Comment: submitted to Phys Rev Let
Clocking the Lyme Spirochete
In order to clear the body of infecting spirochetes, phagocytic cells must be able to get hold of them. In real-time phase-contrast videomicroscopy we were able to measure the speed of Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), the Lyme spirochete, moving back and forth across a platelet to which it was tethered. Its mean crossing speed was 1,636 µm/min (N = 28), maximum, 2800 µm/min (N = 3). This is the fastest speed recorded for a spirochete, and upward of two orders of magnitude above the speed of a human neutrophil, the fastest cell in the body. This alacrity and its interpretation, in an organism with bidirectional motor capacity, may well contribute to difficulties in spirochete clearance by the host
Effect of a rigid nonpolar solute on the splay, bend elastic constants and on rotational viscosity coefficient of 4-4^\prime -n-octyl-cyanobiphenyl
The effect of a rigid nonpolar non-mesogenic solute, ``biphenyl'' which is
(C_{6}H_{5}-C_{6}H_{5}), on the splay and bend elastic constants and on the
rotational viscosity coefficient of (4,4^{\prime})-n-octyl-cyano biphenyl (8CB)
is reported. The experiments involve the measurement of voltage dependence of
capacitance of a cell filled with the mixture. Anomalous behavior of both
(K_{11}) and (\Delta \epsilon) near the (N-S_{A}) transition have been
observed.Comment: RevTeX - 8 figures. Accepted to be published in Physical Review
Family-Based Model Checking with mCRL2
\u3cp\u3eFamily-based model checking targets the simultaneous verfication of multiple system variants, a technique to handle feature-based variability that is intrinsic to software product lines (SPLs). We present an approach for family-based verification based on the feature μ-calculus μL\u3csub\u3ef\u3c/sub\u3e, which combines modalities with feature expressions. This logic is interpreted over featured transition systems, a well-accepted model of SPLs, which allows one to reason over the collective behavior of a number of variants (a family of products). Via an embedding into the modal μ-calculus with data, underpinned by the general-purpose mCRL2 toolset, off-the-shelf tool support for μLf becomes readily available. We illustrate the feasibility of our approach on an SPL benchmark model and show the runtime improvement that family-based model checking with mCRL2 offers with respect to model checking the benchmark product-by-product.\u3c/p\u3
Quantitative Modal Transition Systems
International audienceThis extended abstract offers a brief survey presentation of the specification formalism of modal transition systems and its recent extensions to the quantitative setting of timed as well as stochastic systems. Some applications will also be briefly mentioned
The Intersection of Interfacial Forces and Electrochemical Reactions
We review recent developments in experimental techniques that simultaneously combine measurements of the interaction forces or energies between two extended surfaces immersed in electrolyte solutions—primarily aqueous—with simultaneous monitoring of their (electro)chemical reactions and controlling the electrochemical surface potential of at least one of the surfaces. Combination of these complementary techniques allows for simultaneous real time monitoring of angstrom level changes in surface thickness and roughness, surface–surface interaction energies, and charge and mass transferred via electrochemical reactions, dissolution, and adsorption, and/or charging of electric double layers. These techniques employ the surface forces apparatus (SFA) combined with various “electrochemical attachments” for in situ measurements of various physical and (electro)chemical properties (e.g., cyclic voltammetry), optical imaging, and electric potentials and currents generated naturally during an interaction, as well as when electric fields (potential differences) are applied between the surfaces and/or solution—in some cases allowing for the chemical reaction equation to be unambiguously determined. We discuss how the physical interactions between two different surfaces when brought close to each other (<10 nm) can affect their chemistry, and suggest further extensions of these techniques to biological systems and simultaneous in situ spectroscopic measurements for chemical analysis
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