20 research outputs found
Tetrahedratic mesophases, chiral order, and helical domains induced by quadrupolar and octupolar interactions
We present an exhaustive account of phases and phase transitions that can be stabilized in the recently introduced generalized Lebwohl-Lasher model with quadrupolar and octupolar microscopic interactions [ L. Longa, G. PajÄ
k and T. Wydro Phys. Rev. E 79 040701 (2009)]. A complete mean-field analysis of the model, along with Monte Carlo simulations allows us to identify four distinct classes of the phase diagrams with a number of multicritical points where, in addition to the standard uniaxial and biaxial nematic phases, the other nematic like phases are stabilized. These involve, among the others, tetrahedratic (T), nematic tetrahedratic (NT), and chiral nematic tetrahedratic (NT*) phases of global Td, D2d, and D2 symmetry, respectively. Molecular order parameters and correlation functions in these phases are determined. We conclude with generalizations of the model that give a simple molecular interpretation of macroscopic regions with opposite optical activity (ambidextrous chirality), observed, e.g., in bent-core systems. An estimate of the helical pitch in the NT* phase is also given
Stability of Biaxial Nematic Phase for Systems with Variable Molecular Shape Anisotropy
We study the influence of fluctuations in molecular shape on the stability of
the biaxial nematic phase by generalizing the mean field model of Mulder and
Ruijgrok [Physica A {\bf 113}, 145 (1982)]. We limit ourselves to the case when
the molecular shape anisotropy, represented by the alignment tensor, is a
random variable of an annealed type. A prototype of such behavior can be found
in lyotropic systems - a mixture of potassium laurate, 1-decanol, and ,
where distribution of the micellar shape adjusts to actual equilibrium
conditions. Further examples of materials with the biaxial nematic phase, where
molecular shape is subject to fluctuations, are thermotropic materials composed
of flexible trimeric- or tetrapod-like molecular units. Our calculations show
that the Gaussian equilibrium distribution of the variables describing
molecular shape (dispersion force) anisotropy gives rise to new classes of the
phase diagrams, absent in the original model. Depending on properties of the
shape fluctuations, the stability of the biaxial nematic phase can be either
enhanced or depressed, relative to the uniaxial nematic phases. In the former
case the splitting of the Landau point into two triple points with a direct
phase transition line from isotropic to biaxial phase is observed.Comment: 18 pages containing 6 figure
Chiral Symmetry Breaking in Bent-Core Liquid Crystals
By molecular modeling we demonstrate that the nematic long-range order
discovered in bent-core liquid crystal systems should reveal further spatially
homogeneous phases. Two of them are identified as a tetrahedratic nematic
() phase with symmetry and a chiral tetrahedratic nematic
() phase with symmetry. These new phases were found for a lattice
model with quadrupolar and octupolar anisotropic interactions using Mean Field
theory and Monte Carlo simulations. The phase diagrams exhibit tetrahedratic
(), and phases, in addition to ordinary isotropic (),
uniaxial nematic () and biaxial nematic () phases. To our knowledge,
this is the first molecular model with spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking in
non-layered systems.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, submitted for publicatio
PDE12 removes mitochondrial RNA poly(A) tails and controls translation in human mitochondria
Polyadenylation of mRNA in human mitochondria is crucial for gene expression and perturbation of poly(A) tail length has been linked to a human neurodegenerative disease. Here we show that 2ā²-phosphodiesterase (2ā²-PDE), (hereafter PDE12), is a mitochondrial protein that specifically removes poly(A) extensions from mitochondrial mRNAs both in vitro and in mitochondria of cultured cells. In eukaryotes, poly(A) tails generally stabilize mature mRNAs, whereas in bacteria they increase mRNA turnover. In human mitochondria, the effects of increased PDE12 expression were transcript dependent. An excess of PDE12 led to an increase in the level of three mt-mRNAs (ND1, ND2 and CytB) and two (CO1 and CO2) were less abundant than in mitochondria of control cells and there was no appreciable effect on the steady-state level of the remainder of the mitochondrial transcripts. The alterations in poly(A) tail length accompanying elevated PDE12 expression were associated with severe inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis, and consequently respiratory incompetence. Therefore, we propose that mRNA poly(A) tails are important in regulating protein synthesis in human mitochondria, as it is the case for nuclear-encoded eukaryotic mRNA