670 research outputs found
Wrapping Transition and Wrapping-Mediated Interactions for Discrete Binding along an Elastic Filament: An Exact Solution
The wrapping equilibria of one and two adsorbing cylinders are studied along
a semi-flexible filament (polymer) due to the interplay between elastic
rigidity and short-range adhesive energy between the cylinder and the filament.
We show that statistical mechanics of the system can be solved exactly using a
path integral formalism which gives access to the full effect of thermal
fluctuations, going thus beyond the usual Gaussian approximations which take
into account only the contributions from the minimal energy configuration and
small fluctuations about this minimal energy solution. We obtain the free
energy of the wrapping-unwrapping transition of the filament around the
cylinders as well as the effective interaction between two wrapped cylinders
due to thermal fluctuations of the elastic filament. A change of entropy due to
wrapping of the filament around the adsorbing cylinders as they move closer
together is identified as an additional source of interactions between them.
Such entropic wrapping effects should be distinguished from the usual entropic
configuration effects in semi-flexible polymers. Our results may be applicable
to the problem of adsorption of proteins as well as synthetic nano-particles on
semi-flexible polymers such as DNA.Comment: 24 pages, 12 figure
Submm/mm Galaxy Counterpart Identification Using a Characteristic Density Distribution
We present a new submm/mm galaxy counterpart identification technique which
builds on the use of Spitzer IRAC colors as discriminators between likely
counterparts and the general IRAC galaxy population. Using 102 radio- and
SMA-confirmed counterparts to AzTEC sources across three fields (GOODS-N,
GOODS-S, and COSMOS), we develop a non-parametric IRAC color-color
characteristic density distribution (CDD), which, when combined with positional
uncertainty information via likelihood ratios, allows us to rank all potential
IRAC counterparts around SMGs and calculate the significance of each ranking
via the reliability factor. We report all robust and tentative radio
counterparts to SMGs, the first such list available for AzTEC/COSMOS, as well
as the highest ranked IRAC counterparts for all AzTEC SMGs in these fields as
determined by our technique. We demonstrate that the technique is free of radio
bias and thus applicable regardless of radio detections. For observations made
with a moderate beamsize (~18"), this technique identifies ~85 per cent of SMG
counterparts. For much larger beamsizes (>30"), we report identification rates
of 33-49 per cent. Using simulations, we demonstrate that this technique is an
improvement over using positional information alone for observations with
facilities such as AzTEC on the LMT and SCUBA-2 on JCMT.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Fluctuation spectrum of fluid membranes coupled to an elastic meshwork: jump of the effective surface tension at the mesh size
We identify a class of composite membranes: fluid bilayers coupled to an
elastic meshwork, that are such that the meshwork's energy is a function
\textit{not} of the real microscopic membrane area ,
but of a \textit{smoothed} membrane's area , which corresponds to the
area of the membrane coarse-grained at the mesh size . We show that the
meshwork modifies the membrane tension both below and above the scale
, inducing a tension-jump . The
predictions of our model account for the fluctuation spectrum of red blood
cells membranes coupled to their cytoskeleton. Our results indicate that the
cytoskeleton might be under extensional stress, which would provide a means to
regulate available membrane area. We also predict an observable tension jump
for membranes decorated with polymer "brushes"
The evolution of dust-obscured star formation activity in galaxy clusters relative to the field over the last 9 billion years
We compare the star formation (SF) activity in cluster galaxies to the field
from z=0.3-1.5 using SPIRE 250m imaging. We utilize 274
clusters from the IRAC Shallow Cluster Survey (ISCS) selected as rest-frame
near-infrared overdensities over the 9 square degree Bootes field . This
analysis allows us to quantify the evolution of SF in clusters over a long
redshift baseline without bias against active cluster systems. Using a stacking
analysis, we determine the average star formation rates (SFRs) and
specific-SFRs (SSFR=SFR/M) of stellar mass-limited (M>1.3x10
M), statistical samples of cluster and field galaxies, probing both
the star forming and quiescent populations. We find a clear indication that the
average SF in cluster galaxies is evolving more rapidly than in the field, with
field SF levels at z>1.2 in the cluster cores (r<0.5 Mpc), in good agreement
with previous ISCS studies. By quantifying the SF in cluster and field galaxies
as an exponential function of cosmic time, we determine that cluster galaxies
are evolving ~2 times faster than the field. Additionally, we see enhanced SF
above the field level at z~1.4 in the cluster outskirts (r>0.5 Mpc). These
general trends in the cluster cores and outskirts are driven by the lower mass
galaxies in our sample. Blue cluster galaxies have systematically lower SSFRs
than blue field galaxies, but otherwise show no strong differential evolution
with respect to the field over our redshift range. This suggests that the
cluster environment is both suppressing the star formation in blue galaxies on
long time-scales and rapidly transitioning some fraction of blue galaxies to
the quiescent galaxy population on short time-scales. We argue that our results
are consistent with both strangulation and ram pressure stripping acting in
these clusters, with merger activity occurring in the cluster outskirts.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Gel-Electrophoresis and Diffusion of Ring-Shaped DNA
A model for the motion of ring-shaped DNA in a gel is introduced and studied
by numerical simulations and a mean-field approximation. The ring motion is
mediated by finger-shaped loops (hernias) that move in an amoeba-like fashion
around the gel obstructions. This constitutes an extension of previous
reptation tube treatments. It is shown that tension is essential for describing
the dynamics in the presence of hernias. It is included in the model as long
range interactions over stretched DNA regions. The mobility of ring-shaped DNA
is found to saturate much as in the well-studied case of linear DNA.
Experiments in polymer gels, however, show that the mobility drops
exponentially with the DNA ring size. This is commonly attributed to
dangling-ends in the gel that can impale the ring. The predictions of the
present model are expected to apply to artificial 2D obstacle arrays (W.D.
Volkmuth, R.H. Austin, Nature 358,600 (1992)) which have no dangling-ends. In
the zero-field case an exact solution of the model steady-state is obtained,
and quantities such as the average ring size are calculated. An approximate
treatment of the ring dynamics is given, and the diffusion coefficient is
derived. The model is also discussed in the context of spontaneous symmetry
breaking in one dimension.Comment: 8 figures, LaTeX, Phys. Rev. E - in pres
Mechanochemical action of the dynamin protein
Dynamin is a ubiquitous GTPase that tubulates lipid bilayers and is
implicated in many membrane severing processes in eukaryotic cells. Setting the
grounds for a better understanding of this biological function, we develop a
generalized hydrodynamics description of the conformational change of large
dynamin-membrane tubes taking into account GTP consumption as a free energy
source. On observable time scales, dissipation is dominated by an effective
dynamin/membrane friction and the deformation field of the tube has a simple
diffusive behavior, which could be tested experimentally. A more involved,
semi-microscopic model yields complete predictions for the dynamics of the tube
and possibly accounts for contradictory experimental results concerning its
change of conformation as well as for plectonemic supercoiling.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures; typos corrected, reference adde
Defects in Chiral Columnar Phases: Tilt Grain Boundaries and Iterated Moire Maps
Biomolecules are often very long with a definite chirality. DNA, xanthan and
poly-gamma-benzyl-glutamate (PBLG) can all form columnar crystalline phases.
The chirality, however, competes with the tendency for crystalline order. For
chiral polymers, there are two sorts of chirality: the first describes the
usual cholesteric-like twist of the local director around a pitch axis, while
the second favors the rotation of the local bond-orientational order and leads
to a braiding of the polymers along an average direction. In the former case
chirality can be manifested in a tilt grain boundary phase (TGB) analogous to
the Renn-Lubensky phase of smectic-A liquid crystals. In the latter case we are
led to a new "moire" state with twisted bond order. In the moire state polymers
are simultaneously entangled, crystalline, and aligned, on average, in a common
direction. In the moire state polymers are simultaneously entangled,
crystalline, and aligned, on average, in a common direction. In this case the
polymer trajectories in the plane perpendicular to their average direction are
described by iterated moire maps of remarkable complexity, reminiscent of
dynamical systems.Comment: plain TeX, (33 pages), 17 figures, some uufiled and included, the
remaining available at ftp://ftp.sns.ias.edu/pub/kamien/ or by request to
[email protected]
Pooled resequencing of 122 ulcerative colitis genes in a large Dutch cohort suggests population-Specific associations of rare variants in MUC2
Genome-wide association studies have revealed several common genetic risk variants for ulcerative colitis (UC). However, little is known about the contribution of rare, large effect genetic variants to UC susceptibility. In this study, we performed a deep targeted resequencing of 122 genes in Dutch UC patients in order to investigate the contribution of rare variants to the genetic susceptibility to UC. The selection of genes consists of 111 established human UC susceptibility genes and 11 genes that lead to spontaneous colitis when knocked-out in mice. In addition, we sequenced the promoter regions of 45 genes where known variants exert cis-eQTL-effects. Targeted pooled re-sequencing was performed on DNA of 790 Dutch UC cases. The Genome of the Netherlands project provided sequence data of 500 healthy controls. After quality control and prioritization based on allele frequency and pathogenicity probability, follow-up genotyping of 171 rare variants was performed on 1021 Dutch UC cases and 1166 Dutch controls. Single-variant association and gene-based analyses identified an association of rare variants in the MUC2 gene with UC. The associated variants in the Dutch population could not be replicated in a German replication cohort (1026 UC cases, 3532 controls). In conclusion, this study has identified a putative role for MUC2 on UC susceptibility in the Dutch population and suggests a populationspecific contribution of rare variants to UC
Functionalization of Carbon Nanomaterial Surface by Doxorubicin and Antibodies to Tumor Markers
The actual task of oncology is effective treatment of cancer while causing a minimum harm to the patient. The appearance of polymer nanomaterials and technologies launched new applications and approaches of delivery and release of anticancer drugs. The goal of work was to test ultra dispersed diamonds (UDDs) and onion-like carbon (OLCs) as new vehicles for delivery of antitumor drug (doxorubicin (DOX)) and specific antibodies to tumor receptors. Stable compounds of UDDs and OLCs with DOX were obtained. As results of work, an effectiveness of functionalization was 2.94 % w/w for OLC-DOX and 2.98 % w/w for UDD-DOX. Also, there was demonstrated that UDD-DOX and OLC-DOX constructs had dose-dependent cytotoxic effect on tumor cells in the presence of trypsin. The survival of adenocarcinoma cells reduced from 52 to 28 % in case of incubation with the UDD-DOX in concentrations from 8.4–2.5 to 670–20 μg/ml and from 72 to 30 % after incubation with OLC-DOX. Simultaneously, antibodies to epidermal growth factor maintained 75 % of the functional activity and specificity after matrix-assisted pulsed laser evaporation deposition. Thus, the conclusion has been made about the prospects of selected new methods and approaches for creating an antitumor agent with capabilities targeted delivery of drugs
- …
