6,151 research outputs found
An extension of the Kac ring model
We introduce a unitary dynamics for quantum spins which is an extension of a
model introduced by Mark Kac to clarify the phenomenon of relaxation to
equilibrium. When the number of spins gets very large, the magnetization
satisfies an autonomous equation as function of time with exponentially fast
relaxation to the equilibrium magnetization as determined by the microcanonical
ensemble. This is proven as a law of large numbers with respect to a class of
initial data. The corresponding Gibbs-von Neumann entropy is also computed and
its monotonicity in time discussed.Comment: 15 pages, v2 -> v3: minor typographic correctio
Enstrophy dissipation in two-dimensional turbulence
Insight into the problem of two-dimensional turbulence can be obtained by an
analogy with a heat conduction network. It allows the identification of an
entropy function associated to the enstrophy dissipation and that fluctuates
around a positive (mean) value. While the corresponding enstrophy network is
highly nonlocal, the direction of the enstrophy current follows from the Second
Law of Thermodynamics. An essential parameter is the ratio of the intensity of driving as a function of
wavenumber , to the dissipation strength , where is the
viscosity. The enstrophy current flows from higher to lower values of ,
similar to a heat current from higher to lower temperature. Our probabilistic
analysis of the enstrophy dissipation and the analogy with heat conduction thus
complements and visualizes the more traditional spectral arguments for the
direct enstrophy cascade. We also show a fluctuation symmetry in the
distribution of the total entropy production which relates the probabilities of
direct and inverse enstrophy cascades.Comment: 8 pages, revtex
A meaningful expansion around detailed balance
We consider Markovian dynamics modeling open mesoscopic systems which are
driven away from detailed balance by a nonconservative force. A systematic
expansion is obtained of the stationary distribution around an equilibrium
reference, in orders of the nonequilibrium forcing. The first order around
equilibrium has been known since the work of McLennan (1959), and involves the
transient irreversible entropy flux. The expansion generalizes the McLennan
formula to higher orders, complementing the entropy flux with the dynamical
activity. The latter is more kinetic than thermodynamic and is a possible
realization of Landauer's insight (1975) that, for nonequilibrium, the relative
occupation of states also depends on the noise along possible escape routes. In
that way nonlinear response around equilibrium can be meaningfully discussed in
terms of two main quantities only, the entropy flux and the dynamical activity.
The expansion makes mathematical sense as shown in the simplest cases from
exponential ergodicity.Comment: 19 page
Non-equilibrium stationary state of a two-temperature spin chain
A kinetic one-dimensional Ising model is coupled to two heat baths, such that
spins at even (odd) lattice sites experience a temperature ().
Spin flips occur with Glauber-type rates generalised to the case of two
temperatures. Driven by the temperature differential, the spin chain settles
into a non-equilibrium steady state which corresponds to the stationary
solution of a master equation. We construct a perturbation expansion of this
master equation in terms of the temperature difference and compute explicitly
the first two corrections to the equilibrium Boltzmann distribution. The key
result is the emergence of additional spin operators in the steady state,
increasing in spatial range and order of spin products. We comment on the
violation of detailed balance and entropy production in the steady state.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, Revte
BNIP3 supports melanoma cell migration and vasculogenic mimicry by orchestrating the actin cytoskeleton
BNIP3 is an atypical BH3-only member of the BCL-2 family of proteins with reported pro-death as well as pro-autophagic and cytoprotective functions, depending on the type of stress and cellular context. In line with this, the role of BNIP3 in cancer is highly controversial and increased BNIP3 levels in cancer patients have been linked with both good as well as poor prognosis. In this study, using small hairpin RNA (shRNA) lentiviral transduction to stably knockdown BNIP3 (BNIP3-shRNA) expression levels in melanoma cells, we show that BNIP3 supports cancer cell survival and long-term clonogenic growth. Although BNIP3-shRNA increased mitochondrial mass and baseline levels of reactive oxygen species production, which are features associated with aggressive cancer cell behavior, it also prevented cell migration and completely abolished the ability to form a tubular-like network on matrigel, a hallmark of vasculogenic mimicry (VM). We found that this attenuated aggressive behavior of these melanoma cells was underscored by severe changes in cell morphology and remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton associated with loss of BNIP3. Indeed, BNIP3-silenced melanoma cells displayed enhanced formation of actin stress fibers and membrane ruffles, while lamellopodial protrusions and filopodia, tight junctions and adherens junctions were reduced. Moreover, loss of BNIP3 resulted in re-organization of focal adhesion sites associated with increased levels of phosphorylated focal adhesion kinase. Remarkably, BNIP3 silencing led to a drop of the protein levels of the integrin-associated protein CD47 and its downstream signaling effectors Rac1 and Cdc42. These observations underscore that BNIP3 is required to maintain steady-state levels of intracellular complexes orchestrating the plasticity of the actin cytoskeleton, which is integral to cell migration and other vital processes stimulating cancer progression. All together these results unveil an unprecedented pro-tumorigenic role of BNIP3 driving melanoma cell's aggressive features, like migration and VM
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