1,630 research outputs found
Highly-efficient noise-assisted energy transport in classical oscillator systems
Photosynthesis is a biological process that involves the highly-efficient
transport of energy captured from the sun to a reaction center, where
conversion into useful biochemical energy takes place. Even though one can
always use a quantum perspective to describe any physical process, since
everything follows the laws of Quantum Mechanics, is the use of quantum theory
imperative to explain this high efficiency? Making use of the quantum-classical
correspondence of electronic energy transfer recently introduced by Eisfeld and
Briggs [Phys. Rev. E 85, 046118 (2012)], we show here that the highly-efficient
noise-assisted energy transport described by Rebentrost et al. [New J. Phys.
11, 033003 (2009)], and Plenio and Huelga [New J. Phys. 10, 113019 (2008)], as
the result of the interplay between the quantum coherent evolution of the
photosynthetic system and noise introduced by its surrounding environment, it
can be found as well in purely classical systems. The wider scope of
applicability of the enhancement of energy transfer assisted by noise might
open new ways for developing new technologies aimed at enhancing the efficiency
of a myriad of energy transfer systems, from information channels in
micro-electronic circuits to long-distance high-voltage electrical lines.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Evolution of Ecological Niche Breadth
How ecological niche breadth evolves is central to adaptation and speciation and has been a topic of perennial interest. Niche breadth evolution research has occurred within environmental, ecological, evolutionary, and biogeographical contexts, and although some generalities have emerged, critical knowledge gaps exist. Performance breadth trade-offs, although long invoked, may not be common determinants of niche breadth evolution or limits. Niche breadth can expand or contract from specialist or generalist lineages, and so specialization need not be an evolutionary dead end. Whether niche breadth determines diversification and distribution breadth and how niche breadth is partitioned among individuals and populations within a species are important but particularly understudied topics. Molecular genetic and phylogenetic techniques have greatly expanded understanding of niche breadth evolution, but field studies of how niche breadth evolves are essential for providing mechanistic details and allowing the development of comprehensive theory and improved prediction of biological responses under global change. </jats:p
Coherent delocalization: Views of entanglement in different scenarios
The concept of entanglement was originally introduced to explain correlations
existing between two spatially separated systems, that cannot be described
using classical ideas. Interestingly, in recent years, it has been shown that
similar correlations can be observed when considering different degrees of
freedom of a single system, even a classical one. Surprisingly, it has also
been suggested that entanglement might be playing a relevant role in certain
biological processes, such as the functioning of pigment-proteins that
constitute light-harvesting complexes of photosynthetic bacteria. The aim of
this work is to show that the presence of entanglement in all of these
different scenarios should not be unexpected, once it is realized that the very
same mathematical structure can describe all of them. We show this by
considering three different, realistic cases in which the only condition for
entanglement to exist is that a single excitation is coherently delocalized
between the different subsystems that compose the system of interest
Utility of in vitro culture to the study of plant mitochondrial genome configuration and its dynamic features
Recombination activity plays an important role in the heteroplasmic and stoichiometric variation of plant mitochondrial genomes. Recent studies show that the nuclear gene MSH1 functions to suppress asymmetric recombination at 47 repeat pairs within the Arabidopsis mitochondrial genome. Two additional nuclear genes, RECA3 and OSB1, have also been shown to participate in the control of mitochondrial DNA exchange in Arabidopsis. Here, we demonstrate that repeat-mediated de novo recombination is enhanced in Arabidopsis and tobacco mitochondrial genomes following passage through tissue culture, which conditions the MSH1 and RECA3 suppressions. The mitochondrial DNA changes arising through in vitro culture in tobacco were reversible by plant regeneration, with correspondingly restored MSH1 transcript levels. For a growing number of plant species, mitochondrial genome sequence assembly has been complicated by insufficient information about recombinationally active repeat content. Our data suggest that passage through cell culture provides a rapid and effective means to decipher the dynamic features of a mitochondrial genome by comparative analysis of passaged and non-passaged mitochondrial DNA samples following next-generation sequencing and assembly
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