148 research outputs found
Derivation of Non-isotropic Phase Equations from a General Reaction-Diffusion Equation
A non-isotropic version of phase equations such as the Burgers equation, the
K-dV-Burgers equation, the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation and the Benney
equation in the three-dimensional space is systematically derived from a
general reaction-diffusion system by means of the renormalization group method.Comment: 21pages,no figure
Evidence for a Self-Bound Liquid State and the Commensurate-Incommensurate Coexistence in 2D He on Graphite
We made heat-capacity measurements of two dimensional (2D) He adsorbed on
graphite preplated with monolayer He in a wide temperature range (0.1 80 mK) at densities higher than that for the 4/7 phase (= 6.8
nm). In the density range of 6.8 8.1 nm, the 4/7
phase is stable against additional He atoms up to 20% and they are promoted
into the third layer. We found evidence that such promoted atoms form a
self-bound 2D Fermi liquid with an approximate density of 1 nm from the
measured density dependence of the -coefficient of heat capacity. We
also show evidence for the first-order transition between the commensurate 4/7
phase and the ferromagnetic incommensurate phase in the second layer in the
density range of 8.1 9.5 nm.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Spin-Wave Theory of the Multiple-Spin Exchange Model on a Triangular Lattice in a Magnetic Field : 3-Sublattice Structures
We study the spin wave in the S=1/2 multiple-spin exchange model on a
triangular lattice in a magnetic field within the linear spin-wave theory. We
take only two-, three- and four-spin exchange interactions into account and
restrict ourselves to the region where a coplanar three-sublattice state is the
mean-field ground state. We found that the Y-shape ground state survives
quantum fluctuations and the phase transition to a phase with a 6-sublattice
structure occurs with softening of the spin wave. We estimated the quantum
corrections to the ground state sublattice magnetizations due to zero-point
spin-wave fluctuations.Comment: 8 pages, 20 figure
What is Minimal Model of 3He Adsorbed on Graphite? -Importance of Density Fluctuations in 4/7 Registered Solid -
We show theoretically that the second layer of 3He adsorbed on graphite and
solidified at 4/7 of the first-layer density is close to the fluid-solid
boundary with substantial density fluctuations on the third layer. The solid
shows a translational symmetry breaking as in charge-ordered insulators of
electronic systems. We construct a minimal model beyond the multiple-exchange
Heisenberg model. An unexpectedly large magnetic field required for the
measured saturation of magnetization is well explained by the density
fluctuations. The emergence of quantum spin liquid is understood from the same
mechanism as in the Hubbard model and in \kappa-(ET)_2Cu_2(CN)_3 near the Mott
transitions.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Variational Monte Carlo Study of Electron Differentiation around Mott Transition
We study ground-state properties of the two-dimensional Hubbard model at half
filling by improving variational Monte Carlo method and by implementing
quantum-number projection and multi-variable optimization. The improved
variational wave function enables a highly accurate description of the Mott
transition and strong fluctuations in metals. We clarify how anomalous metals
appear near the first-order Mott transition. The double occupancy stays nearly
constant as a function of the on-site Coulomb interaction in the metallic phase
near the Mott transition in agreement with the previous unbiased results. This
unconventional metal at half filling is stabilized by a formation of
``electron-like pockets'' coexisting with an arc structure, which leads to a
prominent differentiation of electrons in momentum space. An abrupt collapse of
the ``pocket'' and ``arc'' drives the first-order Mott transition.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Spinons and triplons in spatially anisotropic frustrated antiferromagnets
The search for elementary excitations with fractional quantum numbers is a
central challenge in modern condensed matter physics. We explore the
possibility in a realistic model for several materials, the spin-1/2 spatially
anisotropic frustrated Heisenberg antiferromagnet in two dimensions. By
restricting the Hilbert space to that expressed by exact eigenstates of the
Heisenberg chain, we derive an effective Schr\"odinger equation valid in the
weak interchain-coupling regime. The dynamical spin correlations from this
approach agree quantitatively with inelastic neutron measurements on the
triangular antiferromagnet Cs_2CuCl_4. The spectral features in such
antiferromagnets can be attributed to two types of excitations: descendents of
one-dimensional spinons of individual chains, and coherently propagating
"triplon" bound states of spinon pairs. We argue that triplons are generic
features of spatially anisotropic frustrated antiferromagnets, and arise
because the bound spinon pair lowers its kinetic energy by propagating between
chains.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Reprogramming of Embryonic Human Fibroblasts into Fetal Hematopoietic Progenitors by Fusion with Human Fetal Liver CD34+ Cells
Experiments with somatic cell nuclear transfer, inter-cellular hybrid formation_ENREF_3, and ectopic expression of transcription factors have clearly demonstrated that cell fate can be dramatically altered by changing the epigenetic state of cell nuclei. Here we demonstrate, using chemical fusion, direct reprogramming of the genome of human embryonic fibroblasts (HEF) into the state of human fetal liver hFL CD34+ (hFL) hematopoietic progenitors capable of proliferating and differentiating into multiple hematopoietic lineages. We show that hybrid cells retain their ploidy and can differentiate into several hematopoietic lineages. Hybrid cells follow transcription program of differentiating hFL cells as shown by genome-wide transcription profiling. Using whole-genome single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) profiling of both donor genomes we demonstrate reprogramming of HEF genome into the state of hFL hematopoietic progenitors. Our results prove that it is possible to convert the fetal somatic cell genome into the state of fetal hematopoietic progenitors by fusion. This suggests a possibility of direct reprogramming of human somatic cells into tissue specific progenitors/stem cells without going all the way back to the embryonic state. Direct reprogramming of terminally differentiated cells into the tissue specific progenitors will likely prove useful for the development of novel cell therapies
Allyl Isothiocyanate that Induces GST and UGT Expression Confers Oxidative Stress Resistance on C. elegans, as Demonstrated by Nematode Biosensor
Electrophilic xenobiotics and endogenous products from oxidative stresses induce the glutathione S-transferases (GSTs), which form a large family within the phase II enzymes over both animal and plant kingdoms. The GSTs thus induced in turn detoxify these external as well as internal stresses. Because these stresses are often linked to ageing and damage to health, the induction of phase II enzymes without causing adverse effects would be beneficial in slowing down ageing and keeping healthy conditions. for use as a nematode biosensor. With the nematode biosensor, we found that AITC induced GST expression and conferred tolerance on the nematode against various oxidative stresses. We also present evidence that the transcription factor SKN-1 is involved in regulating the GST expression induced by AITC.We show the applicability of the nematode biosensor for discovering and evaluating functional food substances and chemicals that would provide anti-ageing or healthful benefits
DNA Specificity Determinants Associate with Distinct Transcription Factor Functions
To elucidate how genomic sequences build transcriptional control networks, we need to understand the connection between DNA sequence and transcription factor binding and function. Binding predictions based solely on consensus predictions are limited, because a single factor can use degenerate sequence motifs and because related transcription factors often prefer identical sequences. The ETS family transcription factor, ETS1, exemplifies these challenges. Unexpected, redundant occupancy of ETS1 and other ETS proteins is observed at promoters of housekeeping genes in T cells due to common sequence preferences and the presence of strong consensus motifs. However, ETS1 exhibits a specific function in T cell activation; thus, unique transcriptional targets are predicted. To uncover the sequence motifs that mediate specific functions of ETS1, a genome-wide approach, chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq), identified both promoter and enhancer binding events in Jurkat T cells. A comparison with DNase I sensitivity both validated the dataset and also improved accuracy. Redundant occupancy of ETS1 with the ETS protein GABPA occurred primarily in promoters of housekeeping genes, whereas ETS1 specific occupancy occurred in the enhancers of T cellβspecific genes. Two routes to ETS1 specificity were identified: an intrinsic preference of ETS1 for a variant of the ETS family consensus sequence and the presence of a composite sequence that can support cooperative binding with a RUNX transcription factor. Genome-wide occupancy of RUNX factors corroborated the importance of this partnership. Furthermore, genome-wide occupancy of co-activator CBP indicated tight co-localization with ETS1 at specific enhancers, but not redundant promoters. The distinct sequences associated with redundant versus specific ETS1 occupancy were predictive of promoter or enhancer location and the ontology of nearby genes. These findings demonstrate that diversity of DNA binding motifs may enable variable transcription factor function at different genomic sites
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