1,359 research outputs found
Population divergence in nutrient-temperature interactions in Pieris rapae
The interaction between larval host plant quality and temperature can influence the short-term physiological rates and life-history traits of insect herbivores. These factors can vary locally, resulting in local adaptation in responses to diet and temperature, but the comparison of these interactions between populations is infrequently carried out. In this study, we examine how the macronutrient ratio of an artificial diet determines the larval growth, development, and survival of larval Pieris rapae (Lepidoptera: Pieridae) at different temperatures between two invasive North American populations from different climatic regions. We conducted a fully factorial experiment with three temperature treatments (18°C, 25°C, and 32°C) and three artificial diet treatments varying in terms of the ratio of protein to carbohydrate (low protein, balanced, and high protein). The effects of diet on life-history traits were greater at lower temperatures, but these differed between populations. Larvae from the subtropical population had reduced survival to pupation on the low-protein diet in the cold temperature treatment, whereas larval survival for the temperate population was equally high for all temperature and diet treatments. Overall, both populations performed more poorly (i.e., they showed slower rates of consumption, growth, and development, and had a smaller pupal mass) in the diet with the low protein ratio, but larvae from the temperate population were less sensitive to diet ratio changes at all temperatures. Our results confirm that the physiological and life-history consequences of imbalanced nutrition for insect herbivores may depend on developmental temperatures, and that different geographic populations of P. rapae within North America vary in their sensitivity to nutritional balance and temperature
Coating quality as affected by core particle segregation in fluidized bed processing
[EN] Fluidized bed coating is an important technique in the food powder industry, where often particles of a wide size distribution are dealt with. In this paper, glass beads of different particle size distribution were coated with sodium caseinate in a top-spray fluid bed unit. Positron Emission Particle Tracking (PEPT) was used to visualize and quantify the particle motion in the fluidized bed. Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy combined with image analysis were used to investigate the effect of core particle size and its distribution on the thickness and quality of the coating. Particle size significantly affected the thickness and quality of the coating, due to differences in the corresponding fluidization patterns, as corroborated by PEPT observations. As the particle size distribution becomes narrower, segregation is less likely to occur. This results in a thicker coating which is, however, less uniform compared to when cores of a wider particle size distribution are spray coated. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.The authors wish to thank the financial support received from the Fund for Scientific Research-Flanders (Belgium) (F.W.O.-Vlaanderen), as well as from the Programa de Apoyo a la Investigacion y Desarrollo from the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia.Atarés Huerta, LM.; Depypere, F.; Pieters, J.; Dewettinck, K. (2012). Coating quality as affected by core particle segregation in fluidized bed processing. Journal of Food Engineering. 113(3):415-421. doi:10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2012.06.012S415421113
Phantom Field with O(N) Symmetry in Exponential Potential
In this paper, we study the phase space of phantom model with O(\emph{N})
symmetry in exponential potential. Different from the model without O(\emph{N})
symmetry, the introduction of the symmetry leads to a lower bound on the
equation of state for the existence of stable phantom dominated attractor
phase. The reconstruction relation between the potential of O(\textit{N})
phantom system and red shift has been derived.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, replaced with the version to appear on Phys. Rev.
Harmonic maps from degenerating Riemann surfaces
We study harmonic maps from degenerating Riemann surfaces with uniformly
bounded energy and show the so-called generalized energy identity. We find
conditions that are both necessary and sufficient for the compactness in
and modulo bubbles of sequences of such maps.Comment: 27 page
Explicit asymptotic modelling of transient Love waves propagated along a thin coating
The official published version can be obtained from the link below.An explicit asymptotic model for transient Love waves is derived from the exact equations of anti-plane elasticity. The perturbation procedure relies upon the slow decay of low-frequency Love waves to approximate the displacement field in the substrate by a power series in the depth coordinate. When appropriate decay conditions are imposed on the series, one obtains a model equation governing the displacement at the interface between the coating and the substrate. Unusually, the model equation contains a term with a pseudo-differential operator. This result is confirmed and interpreted by analysing the exact solution obtained by integral transforms. The performance of the derived model is illustrated by numerical examples.This work is sponsored by the grant from Higher Education of Pakistan and by the Brunel University’s “BRIEF” research award
Heterogeneous glycosylation and methylation of the Aeromonas caviae flagellin
Bacterial swimming is mediated by the rotation of a flagellar filament. Many bacteria are now known to be able to O-glycosylate their flagellins, the proteins that make up the flagellar filament. For bacteria that use nonulosonic acid sugars such as pseudaminic acid, this glycosylation process is essential for the formation of a functional flagellum. However, the specific role of glycosylation remains elusive. Aeromonas caviae is a model for this process as it has a genetically simple glycosylation system. Here, we investigated the localization of the glycans on the A. caviae flagellum filament. Using mass spectrometry it was revealed that pseudaminic acid O-glycosylation was heterogeneous with no serine or threonine sites that were constantly glycosylated. Site-directed mutagenesis of particular glycosylation sites in most cases resulted in strains that had reduced motility and produced less detectable flagellin on Western blots. For flagellin O-linked glycosylation, there is no known consensus sequence, although hydrophobic amino acids have been suggested to play a role. We, therefore, performed site-directed mutagenesis of isoleucine or leucine residues flanking the sites of glycosylation and demonstrated a reduction in motility and the amount of flagellin present in the cells, indicating a role for these hydrophobic amino acids in the flagellin glycosylation process
The Aeromonas caviae AHA0618 gene modulates cell length and influences swimming and swarming motility
Aeromonas caviae is motile via a polar flagellum in liquid culture, with a lateral flagella system used for swarming on solid surfaces. The polar flagellum also has a role in cellular adherence and biofilm formation. The two subunits of the polar flagellum, FlaA and FlaB, are posttranslationally modified by O-linked glycosylation with pseudaminic acid on 6–8 serine and threonine residues within the central region of these proteins. This modification is essential for the formation of the flagellum. Aeromonas caviae possesses the simplest set of genes required for bacterial glycosylation currently known, with the putative glycosyltransferase, Maf1, being described recently. Here, we investigated the role of the AHA0618 gene, which shares homology (37% at the amino acid level) with the central region of a putative deglycosylation enzyme (HP0518) from the human pathogen Helicobacter pylori, which also glycosylates its flagellin and is proposed to be part of a flagellin deglycosylation pathway. Phenotypic analysis of an AHA0618 A. caviae mutant revealed increased swimming and swarming motility compared to the wild-type strain but without any detectable effects on the glycosylation status of the polar flagellins when analyzed by western blot analysis or mass spectroscopy. Bioinformatic analysis of the protein AHA0618, demonstrated homology to a family of l,d-transpeptidases involved in cell wall biology and peptidoglycan cross-linking (YkuD-like). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and fluorescence microscopy analysis of the wild-type and AHA0618-mutant A. caviae strains revealed the mutant to be subtly but significantly shorter than wild-type cells; a phenomenon that could be recovered when either AHA0618 or H. pylori HP0518 were introduced. We can therefore conclude that AHA0618 does not affect A. caviae behavior by altering polar flagellin glycosylation levels but is likely to have a role in peptidoglycan processing at the bacterial cell wall, consequently altering cell length and hence influencing motility
Effective Theoretical Approach to Back Reaction of the Dynamical Casimir Effect in 1+1 Dimensions
We present an approach to studying the Casimir effects by means of the
effective theory. An essential point of our approach is replacing the mirror
separation into the size of space S^1 in the adiabatic approximation. It is
natural to identify the size of space S^1 with the scale factor of the
Robertson-Walker-type metric. This replacement simplifies the construction of a
class of effective models to study the Casimir effects. To check the validity
of this replacement we construct a model for a scalar field coupling to the
two-dimensional gravity and calculate the Casimir effects by the effective
action for the variable scale factor. Our effective action consists of the
classical kinetic term of the mirror separation and the quantum correction
derived by the path-integral method. The quantum correction naturally contains
both the Casimir energy term and the back-reaction term of the dynamical
Casimir effect, the latter of which is expressed by the conformal anomaly. The
resultant effective action describes the dynamical vacuum pressure, i.e., the
dynamical Casimir force. We confirm that the force depends on the relative
velocity of the mirrors, and that it is always attractive and stronger than the
static Casimir force within the adiabatic approximation.Comment: Published Version, 16 pages, LaTeX2e with graphics package, 1 figur
Superfluidity of flexible chains of polar molecules
We study properties of quantum chains in a gas of polar bosonic molecules
confined in a stack of N identical one- and two- dimensional optical lattice
layers, with molecular dipole moments aligned perpendicularly to the layers.
Quantum Monte Carlo simulations of a single chain (formed by a single molecule
on each layer) reveal its quantum roughening transition. The case of finite
in-layer density of molecules is studied within the framework of the J-current
model approximation, and it is found that N-independent molecular superfluid
phase can undergo a quantum phase transition to a rough chain superfluid. A
theorem is proven that no superfluidity of chains with length shorter than N is
possible. The scheme for detecting chain formation is proposed.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of the QFS2010 satellite conference "Cold
Gases meet Many-Body Theory", Grenoble, August 7, 2010. This is the expanded
version of V.
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