15 research outputs found
Magnetic field induced polarization enhancement in monolayers of tungsten dichalcogenides: Effects of temperature
Optical orientation of localized/bound excitons is shown to be effectively
enhanced by the application of magnetic fields as low as 20 mT in monolayer
WS. At low temperatures, the evolution of the polarization degree of
different emission lines of monolayer WS with increasing magnetic fields is
analyzed and compared to similar results obtained on a WSe monolayer. We
study the temperature dependence of this effect up to K for both
materials, focusing on the dynamics of the valley pseudospin relaxation. A rate
equation model is used to analyze our data and from the analysis of the width
of the polarization deep in magnetic field we conclude that the competition
between the dark exciton pseudospin relaxation and the decay of the dark
exciton population into the localized states are rather different in these two
materials which are representative of the two extreme cases for the ratio of
relaxation rate and depolarization rate
Magnetization dynamics down to zero field in dilute (Cd,Mn)Te quantum wells
The evolution of the magnetization in (Cd,Mn)Te quantum wells after a short
pulse of magnetic field was determined from the giant Zeeman shift of
spectroscopic lines. The dynamics in absence of magnetic field was found to be
up to three orders of magnitude faster than that at 1 T. Hyperfine interaction
and strain are mainly responsible for the fast decay. The influence of a hole
gas is clearly visible: at zero field anisotropic holes stabilize the system of
Mn ions, while in a magnetic field of 1 T they are known to speed up the decay
by opening an additional relaxation channel
The RNA-binding landscape of HAX1 protein indicates its involvement in translation and ribosome assembly
HAX1 is a human protein with no known homologues or structural domains. Mutations in the HAX1 gene cause severe congenital neutropenia through mechanisms that are poorly understood. Previous studies reported the RNA-binding capacity of HAX1, but the role of this binding in physiology and pathology remains unexplained. Here, we report the transcriptome-wide characterization of HAX1 RNA targets using RIP-seq and CRAC, indicating that HAX1 binds transcripts involved in translation, ribosome biogenesis, and rRNA processing. Using CRISPR knockouts, we find that HAX1 RNA targets partially overlap with transcripts downregulated in HAX1 KO, implying a role in mRNA stabilization. Gene ontology analysis demonstrated that genes differentially expressed in HAX1 KO (including genes involved in ribosome biogenesis and translation) are also enriched in a subset of genes whose expression correlates with HAX1 expression in four analyzed neoplasms. The functional connection to ribosome biogenesis was also demonstrated by gradient sedimentation ribosome profiles, which revealed differences in the small subunit:monosome ratio in HAX1 WT/KO. We speculate that changes in HAX1 expression may be important for the etiology of HAX1-linked diseases through dysregulation of translation