113 research outputs found
fragility of bioprotectant glass forming systems in extremophiles
A central issue in the adaptation of proteins and enzymes to extreme conditions is the conservation of their functional state, which is characterized by a well-balanced compromise of stability and flexibility. In this review work an overview of elastic neutron scattering (ENS) findings on a class of bioprotectant glass-forming systems, such as trehalose and its homologous (maltose and sucrose) water mixtures, is presented as a function of temperature and concentration. ENS, in fact, allows to determine some remarkable quantities in order to characterize the correlation among dynamical properties, the flexibility and fragility of biomolecules. The experimental results have pointed out a dynamical transition, which shows a crossover in molecular fluctuations between harmonic and anharmonic dynamical regimes. The ENS findings allow to characterize both the trehalose rigidity and flexibility, which are strictly connected to its superior bioprotective effectiveness. In this frame the lowest flexibility and fragility character of trehalose/H2Omixture with respect to maltose and sucrose/H2Omixtures indicate a better attitude to encapsulate biostructures in more rigid and temperature insensitive structures in approaching the glass transition
Upgrading of Resolution Elastic Neutron Scattering (RENS)
An update of the Resolution Elastic Neutron Scattering (RENS) approach consisting in measuring the elastically scattered neutron intensity versus the instrumental energy resolution is presented. In particular it is shown that the measured elastic scattering law as a function of the logarithm of the instrumental energy of resolution gives rise to an increasing sigmoid trend whose inflection point can be connected with the system relaxation time. The validity of the RENS approach is supported by a numerical simulation, taking into account a Gaussian resolution function and a Lorentzian scattering law, and experimentally by integrated EINS and QENS measurements performed as a function of temperature on three homologous disaccharide/water mixtures showing different relaxation times. Furthermore, the most important advantages of the RENS approach are discussed; in particular, in comparison with QENS, the RENS approach requires a smaller amount of sample, which is an important point in dealing with biological and exotic systems, is not affected by the use of model functions for fitting spectra, and furnishes a direct access to the system relaxation time
Study of the Boson Peak and Fragility of Bioprotectant Glass-Forming Mixtures by Neutron Scattering
The biological relevance of trehalose, glycerol, and their mixtures in several anhydrobiotic and cryobiotic organisms has recently promoted both experimental and simulation studies. In addition, these systems are employed in different industrial fields, such as pharmaceutical and cosmetic industries, as additives in mixtures for cryopreservation and in several formulations. This review article shows an overview of Inelastic Neutron Scattering (INS) data, collected at different temperature values by the OSIRIS time-of-flight spectrometer at the ISIS Facility (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Oxford, UK) and by the IN4 and IN6 spectrometers at the Institut Laue Langevin (ILL, Grenoble, France), on trehalose/glycerol mixtures as a function of the glycerol content. The data analysis allows determining the Boson peak behavior and discussing the findings in terms of fragility in relation to the bioprotective action of trehalose and glycerol
Indoor Fast Neutron Generator for Biophysical and Electronic Applications
This study focuses the attention on an indoor fast neutron generator for biophysical and electronic applications. More specifically, the findings obtained by several simulations with the MCNP Monte Carlo code, necessary for the realization of a shield for indoor measurements, are presented. Furthermore, an evaluation of the neutron spectrum modification caused by the shielding is reported. Fast neutron generators are a valid and interesting available source of neutrons, increasingly employed in a wide range of research fields, such as science and engineering. The employed portable pulsed neutron source is a MP320 Thermo Scientific neutron generator, able to generate 2.5 MeV neutrons with a neutron yield of 2.0 x 106 n/s, a pulse rate of 250 Hz to 20 KHz and a duty factor varying from 5% to 100%. The neutron generator, based on Deuterium-Deuterium nuclear fusion reactions, is employed in conjunction with a solid-state photon detector, made of n-type high-purity germanium (PINS-GMX by ORTEC) and it is mainly addressed to biophysical and electronic studies. The present study showed a proposal for the realization of a shield necessary for indoor applications for MP320 neutron generator, with a particular analysis of the transport of neutrons simulated with Monte Carlo code and described the two main lines of research in which the source will be used
Style modification in breast and Colorectal Cancer Patients: results of a pilot study Long-Survivors
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Evidence of coexistence of change of caged dynamics at Tg and the dynamic transition at Td in solvated proteins
Mossbauer spectroscopy and neutron scattering measurements on proteins
embedded in solvents including water and aqueous mixtures have emphasized the
observation of the distinctive temperature dependence of the atomic mean square
displacements, , commonly referred to as the dynamic transition at some
temperature Td. At low temperatures, increases slowly, but it assume
stronger temperature dependence after crossing Td, which depends on the
time/frequency resolution of the spectrometer. Various authors have made
connection of the dynamics of solvated proteins including the dynamic
transition to that of glass-forming substances. Notwithstanding, no connection
is made to the similar change of temperature dependence of obtained by
quasielastic neutron scattering when crossing the glass transition temperature
Tg, generally observed in inorganic, organic and polymeric glass-formers.
Evidences are presented to show that such change of the temperature dependence
of from neutron scattering at Tg is present in hydrated or solvated
proteins, as well as in the solvents used unsurprisingly since the latter is
just another organic glass-formers. The obtained by neutron scattering at
not so low temperatures has contributions from the dissipation of molecules
while caged by the anharmonic intermolecular potential at times before
dissolution of cages by the onset of the Johari-Goldstein beta-relaxation. The
universal change of at Tg of glass-formers had been rationalized by
sensitivity to change in volume and entropy of the beta-relaxation, which is
passed onto the dissipation of the caged molecules and its contribution to
. The same rationalization applies to hydrated and solvated proteins for
the observed change of at Tg.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures, 1 Tabl
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