197 research outputs found

    Structure and architecture of eisosomes

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    Reaction of human metallothionein-3 with cisplatin and transplatin

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    Human metallothioneins, small cysteine- and metal-rich proteins, play an important role in the acquired resistance to platinum-based anticancer drugs. These proteins contain a M(II)4(CysS)11 cluster and a M(II)3(CysS)9 cluster localized in the α-domain and the β-domain, respectively. The noninducible isoform metallothionein-3 (Zn7MT-3) is mainly expressed in the brain, but was found overexpressed in a number of cancer tissues. Since the structural properties of this isoform substantially differ from those of the ubiquitously occurring Zn7MT-1/Zn7MT-2 isoforms, the reactions of cis-diamminedichloridoplatinum(II) (cisplatin) and trans-diamminedichloridoplatinum(II) (transplatin) with human Zn7MT-3 were investigated and the products characterized. A comparison of the reaction kinetics revealed that transplatin reacts with cysteine ligands of Zn7MT-3 faster than cisplatin. In both binding processes, stoichiometric amounts of Zn(II) were released from the protein. Marked differences between the reaction rates of cisplatin and transplatin binding to Zn7MT-3 and the formation of the Pt-S bonds suggest that the binding of both Pt(II) compounds is a complex process, involving at least two subsequent binding steps. The electrospray ionization mass spectrometry characterization of the products showed that whereas all ligands in cisplatin were replaced by cysteine thiolates, transplatin retained its carrier ammine ligands. The 113Cd NMR studies of Pt1 113Cd6MT-3 revealed that cisplatin binds preferentially to the β-domain of the protein. The rates of reaction of cisplatin and transplatin with Zn7MT-3 were much faster than those of cisplatin and transplatin with Zn7MT-2. The biological consequences of a substantially higher reactivity of cisplatin toward Zn7MT-3 than Zn7MT-2 in the acquired resistance to platinum-based drugs are discusse

    Anisotropy of effective masses in CuInSe2

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    Anisotropy of the valence band is experimentally demonstrated in CuInSe2, a key component of the absorber layer in one of the leading thin-film solar cell technology. By changing the orientation of applied magnetic fields with respect to the crystal lattice, we measure considerable differences in the diamagnetic shifts and effective g-factors for the A and B free excitons. The resulting free exciton reduced masses are combined with a perturbation model for non-degenerate independent excitons and theoretical dielectric constants to provide the anisotropic effective hole masses, revealing anisotropies of 5.5 (4.2) for the A (B) valence bands

    Excitation power and temperature dependence of excitons in CuInSe2

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    Excitonic recombination processes in high quality CuInSe2 single crystals have been studied by photoluminescence (PL) and reflectance spectroscopy as a function of excitation powers and temperature. Excitation power dependent measurements confirm the identification of well-resolved A and B free excitons in the PL spectra and analysis of the temperature quenching of these lines provides values for activation energies. These are found to vary from sample to sample, with values of 12.5 and 18.4meV for the A and B excitons, respectively, in the one showing the highest quality spectra. Analysis of the temperature and power dependent PL spectra from the bound excitonic lines, labelled M1, M2, and M3 appearing in multiplets points to a likely assignment of the hole involved in each case. The M1 excitons appear to involve a conduction band electron and a hole from the B valence band hole. In contrast, an A valence band hole appears to be involved for the M2 and M3 excitons. In addition, the M1 exciton multiplet seems to be due to the radiative recombination of excitons bound to shallow hydrogenic defects, whereas the excitons involved in M2 and M3 are bound to more complex defects. In contrast to the M1 exciton multiplet, the excitonic lines of M2 and M3 saturate at high excitation powers suggesting that the concentration of the defects involved is low. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4709448

    Diamagnetic shift of the A free exciton in CuGaSe2 single crystals

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    Single crystals of CuGaSe2 were studied using magnetophotoluminescence inmagnetic fields up to 20 T at 4.2 K. The rate of the diamagnetic shift in the A free exciton peak was determined to be 9.82 x 10(-6) eV/T-2. This rate was used to calculate the reduced mass as 0.115m(0), the binding energy as 12.9 meV, the Bohr radius as 5.1 nm and an effective hole mass of 0.64m(0) (m(0) is the free electron mass) of the free A exciton using a low-field perturbation approach and the hydrogenic model

    Excited states of the free excitons in CuInSe2 single crystals

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    High-quality CuInSe2 single crystals were studied using polarization resolved photoluminescence (PL) and magnetophotoluminescence (MPL). The emission lines related to the first (n=2) excited states for the A and B free excitons were observed in the PL and MPL spectra at 1.0481 meV and 1.0516 meV, respectively. The spectral positions of these lines were used to estimate accurate values for the A and B exciton binding energies (8.5 meV and 8.4 meV, respectively), Bohr radii (7.5 nm), band gaps (E-g(A)=1.050 eV and E-g(B)=1.054 eV), and the static dielectric constant (11.3) assuming the hydrogenic model

    How eisosomes help the plasma membrane get organized

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    Proteins combine into filaments that hug and modify the membrane

    Comparison of the receptor FGFRL1 from sea urchins and humans illustrates evolution of a zinc binding motif in the intracellular domain

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>FGFRL1, the gene for the fifth member of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) family, is found in all vertebrates from fish to man and in the cephalochordate amphioxus. Since it does not occur in more distantly related invertebrates such as insects and nematodes, we have speculated that FGFRL1 might have evolved just before branching of the vertebrate lineage from the other invertebrates (Beyeler and Trueb, 2006).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We identified the gene for FGFRL1 also in the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus and cloned its mRNA. The deduced amino acid sequence shares 62% sequence similarity with the human protein and shows conservation of all disulfides and N-linked carbohydrate attachment sites. Similar to the human protein, the S. purpuratus protein contains a histidine-rich motif at the C-terminus, but this motif is much shorter than the human counterpart. To analyze the function of the novel motif, recombinant fusion proteins were prepared in a bacterial expression system. The human fusion protein bound to nickel and zinc affinity columns, whereas the sea urchin protein barely interacted with such columns. Direct determination of metal ions by atomic absorption revealed 2.6 mole zinc/mole protein for human FGFRL1 and 1.7 mole zinc/mole protein for sea urchin FGFRL1.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The FGFRL1 gene has evolved much earlier than previously assumed. A comparison of the intracellular domain between sea urchin and human FGFRL1 provides interesting insights into the shaping of a novel zinc binding domain.</p

    Optical properties of high quality Cu2ZnSnSe4 thin films

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    Cu2ZnSnSe4 thin films, fabricated on bare or molybdenum coated glass substrates by magnetron sputtering and selenisation, were studied by a range of techniques. Photoluminescence spectra reveal an excitonic peak and two phonon replicas of a donor-acceptor pair (DAP) recombination. Its acceptor and donor ionisation energies are 27 and 7 meV, respectively. This demonstrates that high-quality Cu2ZnSnSe4 thin films can be fabricated. An experimental value for the longitudinal optical phonon energy of 28 meV was estimated. The band gap energy of 1.01 eV at room temperature was determined using optical absorption spectr
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