1,056 research outputs found
Disassembly kinetics of thick filaments in rabbit skeletal muscle fibers. Effects of ionic strength, Ca2+ concentration, pH, temperature, and cross-bridges on the stability of thick filament structure
The kinetics of dissociation from both ends of thick filaments in a muscle fiber was investigated by an optical diffraction method. The dissociation velocity of thick filaments at a sarcomere length of 2.75 microns increased with increasing the KCl concentration (from 60 mM to 0.5 M), increasing the pH value (from 6.2 to 8.0) or decreasing the temperature (from 25 to 5 degrees C) in the presence of 10 mM pyrophosphate and 5 mM MgCl2. Micromolar concentrations of Ca2+ suppressed the dissociation velocity markedly at shorter sarcomere lengths. The dissociation velocity, v, decreased as thick filaments became shorter, and v = -db/dt = vo exp (alpha b), where b is the length of the thick filament at time t and vo and alpha are constants. The vo value was largely dependent on the KCl concentration but the alpha value was not. The stiffness of a muscle fiber decreased nearly in proportion to the decrease of overlap between thick and thin filaments induced by the dissociation of thick filaments. This indicates that cross-bridges are uniformly distributed and contribute independently to the stiffness of a muscle fiber during the dissociation of thick filaments
Magnetic-field induced competition of two multiferroic orders in a triangular-lattice helimagnet MnI2
Magnetic and dielectric properties with varying magnitude and direction of
magnetic field H have been investigated for a triangular lattice helimagnet
MnI2. The in-plane electric polarization P emerges in the proper screw magnetic
ground state below 3.5 K, showing the rearrangement of six possible
multiferroic domains as controlled by the in-plane H. With every 60-degree
rotation of H around the [001]-axis, discontinuous 120-degree flop of P-vector
is observed as a result of the flop of magnetic modulation vector q. With
increasing the in-plane H above 3 T, however, the stable q-direction changes
from q|| to q||, leading to a change of P-flop patterns under
rotating H. At the critical field region (~3 T), due to the phase competition
and resultant enhanced q-flexibility, P-vector smoothly rotates clockwise twice
while H-vector rotates counter-clockwise once.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Accepted in Physical Review Letter
Electrons doped in cubic perovskite SrMnO3: isotropic metal versus chainlike ordering of Jahn-Teller polarons
Single crystals of electron-doped SrMnO3 with a cubic perovskite structure
have been systematically investigated as the most canonical
(orbital-degenerate) double-exchange system, whose ground states have been
still theoretically controversial. With only 1-2% electron doping by Ce
substitution for Sr, a G-type antiferromagnetic metal with a tiny spin canting
in a cubic lattice shows up as the ground state, where the Jahn-Teller polarons
with heavy mass are likely to form. Further electron doping above 4%, however,
replaces this isotropic metal with an insulator with tetragonal lattice
distortion, accompanied by a quasi-one-dimensional 3z^2-r^2 orbital ordering
with the C-type antiferromagnetism. The self-organization of such dilute
polarons may reflect the critical role of the cooperative Jahn-Teller effect
that is most effective in the originally cubic system.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Two-Staged Magnetoresistance Driven by Ising-like Spin Sublattice in SrCo6O11
A two-staged, uniaxial magnetoresistive effect has been discovered in
SrCo6O11 having a layered hexagonal structure. Conduction electrons and
localized Ising spins are in different sublattices but their interpenetration
makes the conduction electrons sensitively pick up the stepwise
field-dependence of magnetization. The stepwise field-dependence suggests two
competitive interlayer interactions between ferromagnetic Ising-spin layers,
i.e., a ferromagnetic nearest-layer interaction and an antiferromagnetic
next-nearest-layer interaction. This oxide offers a unique opportunity to study
nontrivial interplay between conduction electrons and Ising spins, the coupling
of which can be finely controlled by a magnetic field of a few Tesla.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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