3,842 research outputs found
Properties of Cyclic-Nucleotide Gated Channels Mediating Olfactory Transduction - Activation, Selectivity, and Blockage
Cyclic nucleotide-gated channels (cng channels) in the sensory membrane of olfactory receptor cells, activated after the odorant-induced increase of cytosolic cAMP concentration, conduct the receptor current that elicits electrical excitation of the receptor neurons. We investigated properties of cng channels from frog and rat using inside-out and outside-out membrane patches excised from isolated olfactory receptor cells. Channels were activated by cAMP and cGMP with activation constants of 2.5-4.0-mu-M for cAMP and 1.0-1.8 for cGMP. Hill coefficients of dose-response curves were 1.4-1.8, indicating cooperativity of ligand binding. Selectivity for monovalent alkali cations and the Na/Li mole-fraction behavior identified the channel as a nonselective cation channel, having a cation-binding site of high field strength in the pore. Cytosolic pH effects suggest the presence of an additional titratable group which, when protonated, inhibits the cAMP-induced current with an apparent pK of 5.0-5.2. The pH effects were not voltage dependent. Several blockers of Ca2+ channels also blocked olfactory cng channels. Amiloride, D 600, and diltiazem inhibited the cAMP-induced current from the cytosolic side. Inhibition constants were voltage dependent with values of, respectively, 0.1, 0.3, and 1 mM at - 60 mV, and 0.03, 0.02, and 0.2 mM at + 60 mV. Our results suggest functional similarity between frog and rat cng channels, as well as marked differences to cng channels from photoreceptors and other tissues
Wall turbulence control
A variety of wall turbulence control devices which were experimentally investigated are discussed; these include devices for burst control, alteration of outer flow structures, large eddy substitution, increased heat transfer efficiency, and reduction of wall pressure fluctuations. Control of pre-burst flow was demonstrated with a single, traveling surface depression which is phase-locked to elements of the burst production process. Another approach to wall turbulence control is to interfere with the outer layer coherent structures. A device in the outer part of a boundary layer was shown to suppress turbulence and reduce drag by opposing both the mean and unsteady vorticity in the boundary layer. Large eddy substitution is a method in which streamline curvature is introduced into the boundary layer in the form of streamwise vortices. Riblets, which were already shown to reduce turbulent drag, were also shown to exhibit superior heat transfer characteristics. Heat transfer efficiency as measured by the Reynolds Analogy Factor was shown to be as much as 36 percent greater than a smooth flat plate in a turbulent boundary layer. Large Eddy Break-Up (LEBU) which are also known to reduce turbulent drag were shown to reduce turbulent wall pressure fluctuation
Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Channels of Rat Olfactory Receptor-Cells - Divalent-Cations Control the Sensitivity to Camp
cAMP-gated channels were studied in inside-out membrane patches excised from the apical cellular pore of isolated olfactory receptor cells of the rat. in the absence of divalent cations the dose-response curve of activation of patch current by cAMP had a K-M Of 4.0 mu M at -50 mV and of 2.5 mu M at +50 mV. However, addition of 0.2 or 0.5 mM Ca2+ shifted the K-M of cAMP reversibly to the higher cAMP concentrations of 33 or 90 mu M, respectively, at -50 mV. Among divalent cations, the relative potency for inducing cAMP affinity shifts was: Ca2+ > Sr2+ > Mn2+ > Ba2+ > Mg2+, of which Mg2+ (up to 3 mM) did not shift the K-M at all. This potency sequence corresponds closely to that required for the activation of calmodulin. However, the Ca2+-sensitivity is lower than expected for a calmodulin-mediated action. Brief(60 s) transient exposure to 3 mM Mg2+, in the absence of other divalent cations, had a protective effect in that following washout of Mg2+, subsequent exposure to 0.2 mM Ca2+ no longer caused affinity shifts. This protection effect did not occur in intact cells and was probably a consequence of patch excision, possibly representing ablation of a regulatory protein from the channel cyclic nucleotide binding site. Thus, the binding of divalent cations, probably via a regulatory protein, controls the sensitivity of the cAMP-gated channels to cAMP. The influx of Ca2+ through these channels during the odorant response may rise to a sufficiently high concentration at the intracellular membrane surface to contribute to the desensitization of the odorant-induced response. The results also indicate that divalent cation effects on cyclic nucleotide-gated channels may depend on the sequence of pre-exposure to other divalent cations
Why do ultrasoft repulsive particles cluster and crystallize? Analytical results from density functional theory
We demonstrate the accuracy of the hypernetted chain closure and of the
mean-field approximation for the calculation of the fluid-state properties of
systems interacting by means of bounded and positive-definite pair potentials
with oscillating Fourier transforms. Subsequently, we prove the validity of a
bilinear, random-phase density functional for arbitrary inhomogeneous phases of
the same systems. On the basis of this functional, we calculate analytically
the freezing parameters of the latter. We demonstrate explicitly that the
stable crystals feature a lattice constant that is independent of density and
whose value is dictated by the position of the negative minimum of the Fourier
transform of the pair potential. This property is equivalent with the existence
of clusters, whose population scales proportionally to the density. We
establish that regardless of the form of the interaction potential and of the
location on the freezing line, all cluster crystals have a universal Lindemann
ratio L = 0.189 at freezing. We further make an explicit link between the
aforementioned density functional and the harmonic theory of crystals. This
allows us to establish an equivalence between the emergence of clusters and the
existence of negative Fourier components of the interaction potential. Finally,
we make a connection between the class of models at hand and the system of
infinite-dimensional hard spheres, when the limits of interaction steepness and
space dimension are both taken to infinity in a particularly described fashion.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, submitted to J. Chem. Phys; new version: minor
changes in structure of pape
Potts-Percolation-Gauss Model of a Solid
We study a statistical mechanics model of a solid. Neighboring atoms are
connected by Hookian springs. If the energy is larger than a threshold the
"spring" is more likely to fail, while if the energy is lower than the
threshold the spring is more likely to be alive. The phase diagram and
thermodynamic quantities, such as free energy, numbers of bonds and clusters,
and their fluctuations, are determined using renormalization-group and
Monte-Carlo techniques.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figure
Plasticization and antiplasticization of polymer melts diluted by low molar mass species
An analysis of glass formation for polymer melts that are diluted by
structured molecular additives is derived by using the generalized entropy
theory, which involves a combination of the Adam-Gibbs model and the direct
computation of the configurational entropy based on a lattice model of polymer
melts that includes monomer structural effects. Antiplasticization is
accompanied by a "toughening" of the glass mixture relative to the pure
polymer, and this effect is found to occur when the diluents are small species
with strongly attractive interactions with the polymer matrix. Plasticization
leads to a decreased glass transition temperature T_g and a "softening" of the
fragile host polymer in the glass state. Plasticization is prompted by small
additives with weakly attractive interactions with the polymer matrix. The
shifts in T_g of polystyrene diluted by fully flexible short oligomers are
evaluated from the computations, along with the relative changes in the
isothermal compressibility at T_g to characterize the extent to which the
additives act as antiplasticizers or plasticizers. The theory predicts that a
decreased fragility can accompany both antiplasticization and plasticization of
the glass by molecular additives. The general reduction in the T_g and
fragility of polymers by these molecular additives is rationalized by analyzing
the influence of the diluent's properties (cohesive energy, chain length, and
stiffness) on glass formation in diluted polymer melts. The description of
glass formation at fixed temperature that is induced upon change the fluid
composition directly implies the Angell equation for the structural relaxation
time as function of the polymer concentration, and the computed "zero mobility
concentration" scales linearly with the inverse polymerization index N.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figure
Analysis of the temperature-dependent quantum point contact conductance in view of the metal-insulator transition in two dimensions
The temperature dependence of the conductance of a quantum point contact has
been measured. The conductance as a function of the Fermi energy shows
temperature-independent fixed points, located at roughly multiple integers of
. Around the first fixed point at e/h, the experimental data for
different temperatures can been scaled onto a single curve. For pure thermal
smearing of the conductance steps, a scaling parameter of one is expected. The
measured scaling parameter, however, is significantly larger than 1. The
deviations are interpreted as a signature of the potential landscape of the
quantum point contact, and of the source-drain bias voltage. We relate our
results phenomenologically to the metal-insulator transition in two dimensions.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Grain Size seperation and sediment mixing in Artic Ocean sediments: evidence from the strontium isotope systematic
The (87)Rb/(86)Sr and (87)Sr/(86)Sr ratios of Laptev Sea sediments, of Arctic Ocean sediments and of suspended particulate matter (SPM) from Siberian rivers (Lena and Khatanga) form 'pseudo-isochrons' due to grain-size separation processes which are referred to as 'Lena Mixing Envelope' (LME) and as 'Flood Basalt Envelope' (FBE). At the land-ocean transition the reduction of the particle velocity causes a deposition of coarser grained material and the contact with saline water enhances a precipitation of finer-grained material. The coarse-grained material is enriched in Sr showing less radiogenic (87)Sr/(86)Sr ratios whereas fine grained material is depleted in Sr relative to Rb showing more radiogenic (87)Sr/(86)Sr ratios, The experimentally determined spread of the (87)Rb/(86)Sr and (87)Sr/(86)Sr ratios as a function of grain size in one sediment sample is on the same order as the natural spread of the (87)Sr/(86)Sr ratios observed in all samples from the Arctic Ocean. Chemical Index of Alteration (CIA) for the Lena river SPM tend to confirm previous observations that chemical alteration is negligible in the Arctic environment. Thus, these 'pseudo-isochrons' reflect an average age and the average isotope composition in the river drainage area. Calculated apparent ages from the FBE reflect the age of the Siberian flood basalt of about 220 Ma and the initial ratio of 0.707(1) reflects their mantle origin. The age calculated from the LME of about 125 Ma reflects accidentally the Jurassic and Cretaceous age of the sediments drained by the Lena river and the initial ratio of 0.714(1) reflects the crustal origin of their source rocks. Comparison of geographical locations reveals that all samples from the eastern Laptev Sea (east of 120 degrees E) fall along the LME whereas all samples from the western Laptev Sea (west of 120 degrees E) fall between LME and FBE. Mixing calculations based on (143)Nd/(144)Nd measurements, not influenced by grain size, show that about 75% of the western Laptev Sea sediments originate from the Lena drainage area whereas about 25% of the sediments are delivered from the Siberian flood basalt province. Sediments from the central Arctic Ocean are isotopically related to the Lena drainage area and the Siberian flood basalt province. However, sediments from the Arctic Ocean margins close to Novaya Semlya, Greenland, the Fram Strait and Svalbard originate from sources not yet identified. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
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