105 research outputs found

    Electronic properties and phase transitions in low-dimensional semiconductors

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    We present the first review of the current state of the literature on electronic properties and phase transitions in TlX and TlMX2 (M = Ga, In; X = Se, S, Te) compounds. These chalcogenides belong to a family of the low-dimensional semiconductors possessing chain or layered structure. They are of significant interest because of their highly anisotropic properties, semi- and photoconductivity, non-linear effects in their I-V characteristics (including a region of negative differential resistance), switching and memory effects, second harmonic optical generation, relaxor behavior and potential applications for optoelectronic devices. We review the crystal structure of TlX and TlMX2 compounds, their transport properties under ambient conditions, experimental and theoretical studies of the electronic structure, transport properties and semiconductor-metal phase transitions under high pressure, and sequences of temperature-induced structural phase transitions with intermediate incommensurate states. Electronic nature of the ferroelectric phase transitions in the above-mentioned compounds, as well as relaxor behavior, nanodomains and possible occurrence of quantum dots in doped and irradiated crystals is discussed.Comment: 70 pages, 38 figure

    Modular construction of mammalian gene circuits using TALE transcriptional repressors

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    An important goal of synthetic biology is the rational design and predictable implementation of synthetic gene circuits using standardized and interchangeable parts. However, engineering of complex circuits in mammalian cells is currently limited by the availability of well-characterized and orthogonal transcriptional repressors. Here, we introduce a library of 26 reversible transcription activator–like effector repressors (TALERs) that bind newly designed hybrid promoters and exert transcriptional repression through steric hindrance of key transcriptional initiation elements. We demonstrate that using the input-output transfer curves of our TALERs enables accurate prediction of the behavior of modularly assembled TALER cascade and switch circuits. We also show that TALER switches using feedback regulation exhibit improved accuracy for microRNA-based HeLa cancer cell classification versus HEK293 cells. Our TALER library is a valuable toolkit for modular engineering of synthetic circuits, enabling programmable manipulation of mammalian cells and helping elucidate design principles of coupled transcriptional and microRNA-mediated post-transcriptional regulation.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant 5R01CA155320-04)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant P50GM098792)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant 1R01CA173712-01

    Detection of cholera toxin by a highly sensitive bead-enzyme linked immunosorbent assay

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    A bead-enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (bead-ELISA) for detection and quantification of cholera toxin (CT) in broth cultures of Vibrio cholerae O1 has been developed. Under optimal buffer and pH conditions the bead-ELISA could consistently detect 40 pg/ml of CT. None of the ingredients of commonly used media for in vitro culture of V. cholerae O1 hindered the performance of the bead-ELISA. Evaluation of the sensitivity and specificity of the bead-ELISA against the commonly used reversed passive latex agglutination (RPLA) test for detection of CT was performed using a collection of 239 strains of V. cholerae O1 (including both biotypes and serotypes) which were examined by a gene probe encoding for the A1 subunit of CT. Although both the assays were highly specific, the bead-ELISA was more sensitive than the RPLA. Quantification of CT by the bead-ELISA revealed that the concentration of CT produced by the strains of V. cholerae O1 which were negative by the RPLA was lower than 1 ng/ml and therefore below the minimum detection ability of the RPLA. The bead-ELISA is a simple, specific and highly sensitive assay for routine detection of CT and is recommended for routine use in clinical microbiology laboratories
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