40 research outputs found
QCD and strongly coupled gauge theories : challenges and perspectives
We highlight the progress, current status, and open challenges of QCD-driven physics, in theory and in experiment. We discuss how the strong interaction is intimately connected to a broad sweep of physical problems, in settings ranging from astrophysics and cosmology to strongly coupled, complex systems in particle and condensed-matter physics, as well as to searches for physics beyond the Standard Model. We also discuss how success in describing the strong interaction impacts other fields, and, in turn, how such subjects can impact studies of the strong interaction. In the course of the work we offer a perspective on the many research streams which flow into and out of QCD, as well as a vision for future developments.Peer reviewe
Biological Roles of the Podospora anserina Mitochondrial Lon Protease and the Importance of Its N-Domain
Mitochondria have their own ATP-dependent proteases that maintain the functional state of the organelle. All multicellular eukaryotes, including filamentous fungi, possess the same set of mitochondrial proteases, unlike in unicellular yeasts, where ClpXP, one of the two matricial proteases, is absent. Despite the presence of ClpXP in the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina, deletion of the gene encoding the other matricial protease, PaLon1, leads to lethality at high and low temperatures, indicating that PaLON1 plays a main role in protein quality control. Under normal physiological conditions, the PaLon1 deletion is viable but decreases life span. PaLon1 deletion also leads to defects in two steps during development, ascospore germination and sexual reproduction, which suggests that PaLON1 ensures important regulatory functions during fungal development. Mitochondrial Lon proteases are composed of a central ATPase domain flanked by a large non-catalytic N-domain and a C-terminal protease domain. We found that three mutations in the N-domain of PaLON1 affected fungal life cycle, PaLON1 protein expression and mitochondrial proteolytic activity, which reveals the functional importance of the N-domain of the mitochondrial Lon protease. All PaLon1 mutations affected the C-terminal part of the N-domain. Considering that the C-terminal part is predicted to have an α helical arrangement in which the number, length and position of the helices are conserved with the solved structure of its bacterial homologs, we propose that this all-helical structure participates in Lon substrate interaction
Constraining couplings of top quarks to the Z boson in t t ¯ + Z production at the LHC
The overwintering of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba, from an ecophysiological perspective
A major aim of this review is to determine
which physiological functions are adopted by adults and
larvae to survive the winter season with low food supply
and their relative importance. A second aim is to clarify the
extent to which seasonal variation in larval and adult krill
physiology is mediated by environmental factors with a
strong seasonality, such as food supply or day light. Experimental
studies on adult krill have demonstrated that speciWc
physiological adaptations during autumn and winter,
such as reduced metabolic rates and feeding activity, are
not caused simply by the scarcity of food, as was previously
assumed. These adaptations appear to be inXuenced
by the local light regime. The physiological functions that
larval krill adopt during winter (reduced metabolism,
delayed development, lipid utilisation, and variable growth
rates) are, in contrast to the adults, under direct control by
the available food supply. During winter, the adults often
seem to have little association with sea ice (at least until
early spring). The larvae, however, feed within sea ice but
mainly on the grazers of the ice algal community rather
than on the algae themselves. In this respect, a miss-match
in timing of the occurrence of the last phytoplankton
blooms in autumn and the start of the sea ice formation, as
has been increasingly observed in the west Antarctic Peninsula
(WAP) region, will impact larval krill development
during winter in terms of food supply and consequently the
krill stock in this region
New insights into structural and functional relationships between LonA proteases and ClpB chaperones
Physiology of Euphausia superba
Since the 1920s, E. superba is one of the best studied species in the Southern Ocean in terms of their general biology. The main driver for this research focus has been the fisheries’ requirements for stock forecasting and conservation measures. Nowadays this is joined by concerns over climate change effects and the requirement to take a more holistic over view to understand food web structures. So far, however, we do not have a clear understanding of the physiological response of krill and hence their adaptability to cope with ongoing environmental changes, caused by the anthropogenic carbon emissions. This is due to the extreme lack of intense studies on krill physiology, especially of their larval stages in relation to their seasonal environment. A major aim of this book chapter is on the one hand to summaries how physiological functions such as lipid accumulation and utilisation, metabolic activity and growth change with ontogeny and season and to demonstrate which environmental factors are the main drivers for seasonal variability of these functions in adult and larval krill. On the other hand, we draw the attention to the importance of photoperiod (day length) as an entrainment cue for endogenous rhythms and clocks in the life cycle of krill. Furthermore, we give an overview of the current knowledge on the impact of elevated seawater temperature and ocean acidification on krill
