867 research outputs found
Editorial: Bioadhesion
Materials and systems preventing the separation of two surfaces may be defined as adhesives. There are a variety of natural adhesive devices based on entirely mechanical principles, while others additionally rely on the chemistry of polymers and colloids. Adhesive organs are functional systems, the purpose of which is either temporary or permanent attachment of an organism to the substrate surface, to another organism, or temporary interconnection of body parts within an organism. Their design varies enormously and is subject to different functional loads. There is no doubt that many functional solutions have evolved independently in different lineages of organisms. Many species of animals and plants are supplied with diverse adhesive surfaces, the morphology of which depends on the species biology, and the particular function in which the adhesive device is involved. There are numerous publications on cell adhesion phenomena, but much fewer references are devoted to the non-specific adhesion of living organisms. Because of the structural, mechanical, and chemical complexity of biological surfaces related to adhesion, exact working mechanisms have been clarified only for some systems. In this Research Topic (RT) “Bioadhesion”, we aimed at collecting articles dealing with biological surfaces and systems specialized for adhesion enhancement. These contributions discuss adhesive function of biological surfaces and their relationship with the structure, contact mechanics and chemistry of surfaces. Because of the diversity of functions in adhesion-related biological surfaces, biology could provide interesting inspirations for a broad range of topics in physics, chemistry, and engineering. In the following, we briefly introduce the 13 articles comprising this RT. They can be broadly divided into four categories: 1) bacterial adhesion, 2) plant adhesion, 3) animal adhesion, and 4) biomimetic adhesion
Black Strings in Our World
The brane world scenario is a new approach to resolve the problem on how to
compactify the higher dimensional spacetime to our 4-dimensional world. One of
the remarkable features of this scenario is the higher dimensional effects in
classical gravitational interactions at short distances. Due to this feature,
there are black string solutions in our 4-dimensional world. In this paper,
assuming the simplest model of complex minimally coupled scalar field with the
local U(1) symmetry, we show a possibility of black-string formation by merging
processes of type I long cosmic strings in our 4-dimensional world. No fine
tuning for the parameters in the model might be necessary.Comment: 11pages, no figur
Prevention of growth arrest-induced cell death of vascular smooth muscle cells by a product of growth arrest-specific gene, gas6
AbstractWe have purified Gas6 as a growth-potentiating factor for vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) [Nakano, T. et al. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 5702-57051. However, specific production of Gas6 in growth-arrested cells raises an intriguing question as to the physiological function of Gas6. In this study, we found that serum-starved VSMCs secreted some survival factors and depletion of the factors induced cell death of VSMCs. Finally, we demonstrated that cell death was prevented by the addition of Gas6, suggesting that one of the major biological activity of Gas6 is protection of growth-arrested VSMCs from death
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