7,074 research outputs found

    Photocurrent in a visible-light graphene photodiode

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    We calculate the photocurrent in a clean graphene sample normally irradiated by a monochromatic electromagnetic field and subject to a step-like electrostatic potential. We consider the photon energies Ω\hbar\Omega that significantly exceed the height of the potential barrier, as is the case in the recent experiments with graphene-based photodetectors. The photocurrent comes from the resonant absorption of photons by electrons and decreases with increasing ratio Ω/U0\hbar\Omega/U_0. It is weakly affected by the background gate voltage and depends on the light polarization as sin2γ\propto\sin^2\gamma, γ\gamma being the angle between the potential and the polarization plane.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Dependence of folding rates on protein length

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    Using three-dimensional Go lattice models with side chains for proteins, we investigate the dependence of folding times on protein length. In agreement with previous theoretical predictions, we find that the folding time grows as a power law with the chain length N with exponent λ3.6\lambda \approx 3.6 for the Go model, in which all native interactions (i.e., between all side chains and backbone atoms) are uniform. If the interactions between side chains are given by pairwise statistical potentials, which introduce heterogeneity in the contact energies, then the power law fits yield large λ\lambda values that typically signifies a crossover to an underlying activated process. Accordingly, the dependence of folding time is best described by the stretched exponential \exp(\sqrt{N}). The study also shows that the incorporation of side chains considerably slows down folding by introducing energetic and topological frustration.Comment: 6 pages, 5 eps figure

    The molecular basis for oocyst wall formation in Eimeria maxima

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    University of Technology, Sydney. Institute for the Biotechnology of Infectious Diseases.Eimeria is a genus of protozoa within the Apicomplexa, a phylum that includes Plasmodium species (which cause malaria) and Toxoplasma gondii (which cause foetal abnormalities and encephalitis), and many other species of parasites. Eimeria belongs to the subclass Coccidia, and a defining characteristic of this group is their transmission from host to host via oocysts that contaminate food and water. The resilient oocyst wall protects the parasites as they are excreted in the host’s faeces and in the outside world, allowing them to survive for several months between hosts. It is formed from the contents of specialised organelles - wall forming bodies - found in the macro gametocyte stage of the parasites. Two proteins, EmGam56 and EmGam82, from the wall forming bodies of Eimeria maxima have been studied intensively in recent years (see Belli et al, 2006). Both are processed and/or degraded into smaller tyrosine-rich polypeptides (from 8 to 33 kDa) and incorporated into the oocyst wall. The tyrosine richness of these proteins and the presence of dityrosine in the oocyst wall has led to the proposal that dityrosine cross-linking of these proteins forms a matrix that is crucial component for oocyst wall formation (Belli et al., 2006). The aims of this thesis are to: [1] deduce the biochemical composition of the oocyst walls using gas chromatography (GC) and mass spectrometry (MS); [2] determine the structural features of EmGam56 using bioinformatics, circular dichroism (CD), and one-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (1D-NMR); [3] demonstrate that peroxidase-catalysed dityrosine crosslinks can be induced to form between truncated forms of EmGam56. GC and MS revealed that the Eimeria oocyst wall is composed mainly of proteins (>90%) with small amount of lipids (1.4-7.6%) and carbohydrates (0.3-2.0%). There is little difference between the unsporulated and sporulated oocyst walls of E. tenella and E. maxima. Thus, the structure of proteins like EmGam56 is key to understanding how oocyst walls are constructed. Bioinformatic analyses indicated that EmGam56 is an intrinsically unstructured protein (IUP), dominated by random coils (52-70%), with some a-helices (28-43%) but few P-sheets (1-11%); this was confirmed by CD and 1D-NMR. Furthermore, the structural integrity of the protein under extreme temperatures (boiling for 40 minutes) and pH (pH 1.3-11) indicated its IUP nature. The intrinsic lack of structure in EmGam56 could facilitate its incorporation into the oocyst wall in two ways: first, IUPs are highly susceptible to proteolysis, explaining the several differently-sized oocyst wall proteins derived from EmGam56; and, second, the flexibility of IUPs could facilitate cross-linking between these tyrosine-rich derivatives. Peroxidases are key to the formation of dityrosine bonds (see Belli et al, 2006 for a review). An in vitro cross-linking assay was developed using a recombinant 42 kDa truncation of EmGam56. The protein was exposed to various peroxidases and peroxides, the formation of polymers was followed by Western blotting, and the formation of dityrosines was determined by HPLC. Peroxidases from plants or fungi, but not mammals, catalysed rapid formation of polymers. No peroxidase has yet been found in the incompletely annotated E. tenella genome database but peroxidase activity has been detected in the wall forming bodies (Belli et al, 2006). Therefore, future searches for Eimeria peroxidases should focus on plant-like homologous. The results presented in this thesis support the proposal that dityrosine bonding between proteins is an important factor in the formation of the oocyst wall of coccidian parasites and are consistent with the hypothesis that antibodies stimulated by vaccination with EmGam56 and related proteins could prevent formation of oocysts

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    Senior Project submitted to The Division of Arts of Bard College
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