99 research outputs found

    Ion repulsion within membranes

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    The adsorption of hydrophobic ions such as tetraphenylborate to thin lipid membranes is known to saturate at approximately 0.1 ion/(nm)2. This saturation can be quantitatively explained by electrostatic repulsion between the ions if they are treated as discrete, mobile particles that adsorb within the lipid at least partially removed from the aqueous phases. The electrochemical potential of the ions as a function of their surface density can be expressed as a virial expansion, which in principle exactly describes the equilibrium properties of the physical model. The first few terms of the virial expansion are calculated and an approximation is considered for higher-order terms. The model has only two adjustable parameters, the depth of the adsorption sites into the lipid and the adsorption constant in the absence of repulsion. The mobile, discrete charge model can give much better fits to the equilibrium data for tetraphenylborate adsorbed at up to 0.1 ion/(nm)2 to membranes and monolayers. (Andersen et al., 1978) than those obtainable from either the smeared charge or hexagonal lattice models

    Evaluating performance in three-dimensional fluorescence microscopy

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    In biological fluorescence microscopy, image contrast is often degraded by a high background arising from out of focus regions of the specimen. This background can be greatly reduced or eliminated by several modes of thick specimen microscopy, including techniques such as 3-D deconvolution and confocal. There has been a great deal of interest and some confusion about which of these methods is ‘better’, in principle or in practice. The motivation for the experiments reported here is to establish some rough guidelines for choosing the most appropriate method of microscopy for a given biological specimen. The approach is to compare the efficiency of photon collection, the image contrast and the signal-to-noise ratio achieved by the different methods at equivalent illumination, using a specimen in which the amount of out of focus background is adjustable over the range encountered with biological samples. We compared spot scanning confocal, spinning disk confocal and wide-field/deconvolution (WFD) microscopes and find that the ratio of out of focus background to in-focus signal can be used to predict which method of microscopy will provide the most useful image. We also find that the precision of measurements of net fluorescence yield is very much lower than expected for all modes of microscopy. Our analysis enabled a clear, quantitative delineation of the appropriate use of different imaging modes relative to the ratio of out-of-focus background to in-focus signal, and defines an upper limit to the useful range of the three most common modes of imaging

    Hansenula polymorpha Swi1p and Snf2p are essential for methanol utilisation

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    We have cloned the Hansenula polymorpha SWI1 and SNF2 genes by functional complementation of mutants that are defective in methanol utilisation. These genes encode proteins similar to Saccharomyces cerevisiae Swi1p and Snf2p, which are subunits of the SWI/SNF complex. This complex belongs to the family of nucleosome-remodeling complexes that play a role in transcriptional control of gene expression. Analysis of the phenotypes of constructed H. polymorpha SWI1 and SNF2 disruption strains indicated that these genes are not necessary for growth of cells on glucose, sucrose, or various organic nitrogen sources which involve the activity of peroxisomal oxidases. Both disruption strains showed a moderate growth defect on glycerol and ethanol, but were fully blocked in methanol utilisation. In methanol-induced cells of both disruption strains, two peroxisomal enzymes involved in methanol metabolism, alcohol oxidase and dihydroxyacetone synthase, were hardly detectable, whereas in wild-type cells these proteins were present at very high levels. We show that the reduction in alcohol oxidase protein levels in H. polymorpha SWI1 and SNF2 disruption strains is due to strongly reduced expression of the alcohol oxidase gene. The level of Pex5p, the receptor involved in import of alcohol oxidase and dihydroxyacetone synthase into peroxisomes, was also reduced in both disruption strains compared to that in wild-type cells.

    Ion repulsion within membranes

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