23 research outputs found
Metallic, magnetic and molecular nanocontacts
Scanning tunnelling microscopy and break-junction experiments realize metallic and molecular nanocontacts that act as ideal one-dimensional channels between macroscopic electrodes. Emergent nanoscale phenomena typical of these systems encompass structural, mechanical, electronic, transport, and magnetic properties. This Review focuses on the theoretical explanation of some of these properties obtained with the help of first-principles methods. By tracing parallel theoretical and experimental developments from the discovery of nanowire formation and conductance quantization in gold nanowires to recent observations of emergent magnetism and Kondo correlations, we exemplify the main concepts and ingredients needed to bring together ab initio calculations and physical observations. It can be anticipated that diode, sensor, spin-valve and spin-filter functionalities relevant for spintronics and molecular electronics applications will benefit from the physical understanding thus obtained
The Real maccoyii: Identifying Tuna Sushi with DNA Barcodes – Contrasting Characteristic Attributes and Genetic Distances
BACKGROUND:The use of DNA barcodes for the identification of described species is one of the least controversial and most promising applications of barcoding. There is no consensus, however, as to what constitutes an appropriate identification standard and most barcoding efforts simply attempt to pair a query sequence with reference sequences and deem identification successful if it falls within the bounds of some pre-established cutoffs using genetic distance. Since the Renaissance, however, most biological classification schemes have relied on the use of diagnostic characters to identify and place species. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Here we developed a cytochrome c oxidase subunit I character-based key for the identification of all tuna species of the genus Thunnus, and compared its performance with distance-based measures for identification of 68 samples of tuna sushi purchased from 31 restaurants in Manhattan (New York City) and Denver, Colorado. Both the character-based key and GenBank BLAST successfully identified 100% of the tuna samples, while the Barcode of Life Database (BOLD) as well as genetic distance thresholds, and neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree building performed poorly in terms of species identification. A piece of tuna sushi has the potential to be an endangered species, a fraud, or a health hazard. All three of these cases were uncovered in this study. Nineteen restaurant establishments were unable to clarify or misrepresented what species they sold. Five out of nine samples sold as a variant of "white tuna" were not albacore (T. alalunga), but escolar (Lepidocybium flavorunneum), a gempylid species banned for sale in Italy and Japan due to health concerns. Nineteen samples were northern bluefin tuna (T. thynnus) or the critically endangered southern bluefin tuna (T. maccoyii), though nine restaurants that sold these species did not state these species on their menus. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:The Convention on International Trade Endangered Species (CITES) requires that listed species must be identifiable in trade. This research fulfills this requirement for tuna, and supports the nomination of northern bluefin tuna for CITES listing in 2010
Measurement and QCD analysis of double-differential inclusive jet cross sections in pp collisions at √s=8 TeV and cross section ratios to 2.76 and 7 TeV
A measurement of the double-differential inclusive jet cross section as a function
of the jet transverse momentum pT and the absolute jet rapidity |y| is presented.
Data from LHC proton-proton collisions at √
s = 8 TeV, corresponding to an integrated
luminosity of 19.7 fb−1
, have been collected with the CMS detector. Jets are reconstructed
using the anti-kT clustering algorithm with a size parameter of 0.7 in a phase space region
covering jet pT from 74 GeV up to 2.5 TeV and jet absolute rapidity up to |y| = 3.0. The
low-pT jet range between 21 and 74 GeV is also studied up to |y| = 4.7, using a dedicated
data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 5.6 pb−1
. The measured
jet cross section is corrected for detector effects and compared with the predictions from
perturbative QCD at next-to-leading order (NLO) using various sets of parton distribution
functions (PDF). Cross section ratios to the corresponding measurements performed at
2.76 and 7 TeV are presented. From the measured double-differential jet cross section, the
value of the strong coupling constant evaluated at the Z mass is αS(MZ) = 0.1164+0.0060
−0.0043,
where the errors include the PDF, scale, nonperturbative effects and experimental uncertainties,
using the CT10 NLO PDFs. Improved constraints on PDFs based on the inclusive
jet cross section measurement are presented
Species-Specificity of the BamA Component of the Bacterial Outer Membrane Protein-Assembly Machinery
The structural basis of autotransporter translocation by TamA
TamA is an Escherichia coli Omp85 protein involved in autotransporter biogenesis. It comprises a 16-stranded transmembrane β-barrel and three POTRA domains. The 2.3-Å crystal structure reveals that the TamA barrel is closed at the extracellular face by a conserved lid loop. The C-terminal β-strand of the barrel forms an unusual inward kink, which weakens the lateral barrel wall and creates a gate for substrate access to the lipid bilayer
Dietary zinc supplementation ameliorates LPS-Induced teratogenicity in mice
Maternal infection during the first trimester of pregnancy has been associated with preterm birth, spontaneous abortion, growth retardation, and congenital anomalies. Previously, our group has shown that subcutaneous injection of zinc prevents endotoxin [lipopolysaccharide (LPS)]-induced teratogenicity. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether increasing or decreasing dietary zinc alters the teratogenic effects of LPS. Female C57BL6 mice were mated and fed diets containing 5, 35, or 100 mg/kg zinc. On gestational day (GD) 8, pregnant dams were injected with either LPS (0.5 mg/kg s.c.) or saline and killed on GD18. LPS-treated fetuses from dams fed 5 and 35 mg/kg zinc diet had a significantly higher number of abnormalities per litter (2- and 1- fold saline controls, respectively) compared with those from LPS + zinc supplemented dams, which were not significantly different from the saline control groups. The beneficial effect and importance of zinc was also reflected in the larger size of fetuses (weight and crown-rump length) from the LPS + zinc-supplemented treatment group. We have demonstrated that low dietary zinc during exposure to infection (i.e. LPS) in pregnancy augments the negative impact of LPS alone, and that dietary zinc supplementation throughout pregnancy ameliorates LPS-induced teratogenicity.Joanne S C Chua ; Allan M Rofe ; Peter Coyl