2,291 research outputs found
Molecular Organization of Vomeronasal Chemoreception
The vomeronasal organ (VNO) has a key role in mediating the social and defensive responses of many terrestrial vertebrates to species- and sex-specific chemosignals. More than 250 putative pheromone receptors have been identified in the mouse VNO, but the nature of the signals detected by individual VNO receptors has not yet been elucidated. To gain insight into the molecular logic of VNO detection leading to mating, aggression or defensive responses, we sought to uncover the response profiles of individual vomeronasal receptors to a wide range of animal cues. Here we describe the repertoire of behaviourally and physiologically relevant stimuli detected by a large number of individual vomeronasal receptors in mice, and define a global map of vomeronasal signal detection. We demonstrate that the two classes (V1R and V2R) of vomeronasal receptors use fundamentally different strategies to encode chemosensory information, and that distinct receptor subfamilies have evolved towards the specific recognition of certain animal groups or chemical structures. The association of large subsets of vomeronasal receptors with cognate, ethologically and physiologically relevant stimuli establishes the molecular foundation of vomeronasal information coding, and opens new avenues for further investigating the neural mechanisms underlying behaviour specificity.Molecular and Cellular Biolog
Asymptotically exact solution of a local copper-oxide model
We present an asymptotically exact solution of a local copper-oxide model
abstracted from the multi-band models. The phase diagram is obtained through
the renormalization-group analysis of the partition function. In the strong
coupling regime, we find an exactly solved line, which crosses the quantum
critical point of the mixed valence regime separating two different
Fermi-liquid (FL) phases. At this critical point, a many-particle resonance is
formed near the chemical potential, and a marginal-FL spectrum can be derived
for the spin and charge susceptibilities.Comment: 11 pages, 1 postcript figure is appended as self-extracting archive,
Revtex 2.0, ICTP preprint 199
Chemical, functional, and structural properties of spent coffee grounds and coffee silverskin
Spent coffee grounds (SCG) and coffee silverskin (CS) represent a great pollution hazard if discharged into the environment. Taking this fact into account, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the chemical composition, functional properties, and structural characteristics of these agro-industrial residues in order to identify the characteristics that allow their reutilization in industrial processes. According to the results, SCG and CS are both of lignocellulosic nature. Sugars polymerized to their cellulose and hemicellulose fractions correspond to 51.5 and 40.45 % w/w, respectively; however, the hemicellulose sugars and their composition significantly differ from one residue to another. SCG and CS particles differ in terms of morphology and crystallinity, but both materials have very low porosity and similar melting point. In terms of functional properties, SCG and CS present good water and oil holding capacities, emulsion activity and stability, and antioxidant potential, being therefore great candidates for use on food and pharmaceutical fields.The authors acknowledge the financial support of the Science and Technology Foundation of Portugal (FCT) through the grant SFRH/BD/80948/2011 and the Strategic Project PEst-OE/EQB/LA0023/2013. The authors also thank the Project "BioInd - Biotechnology and Bioengineering for improved Industrial and Agro-Food processes", REF. NORTE-07-0124-FEDER-000028 co-funded by the Programa Operacional Regional do Norte (ON.2-O Novo Norte), QREN, FEDER. Thanks are also given to Prof. Jose J.M. Orfao, from the Department of Chemical Engineering, Universidade do Porto (Portugal), for his assistance with the porosity analyses
Universality class of non-Fermi liquid behavior in mixed valence systems
A generalized Anderson single-impurity model with off-site Coulomb
interactions is derived from the extended three-band Hubbard model, originally
proposed to describe the physics of the copper-oxides. Using the abelian
bosonization technique and canonical transformations, an effective Hamiltonian
is derived in the strong coupling limit, which is essentially analogous to the
Toulouse limit of the ordinary Kondo problem. In this limit, the effective
Hamiltonian can be exactly solved, with a mixed valence quantum critical point
separating two different Fermi liquid phases, {\it i.e.} the Kondo phase and
the empty orbital phase. In the mixed valence quantum critical regime, the
local moment is only partially quenched and X-ray edge singularities are
generated. Around the quantum critical point, a new type of non-Fermi liquid
behavior is predicted with an extra specific heat and a
singular spin-susceptibility . At the same time, the
effective Hamiltonian under single occupancy is transformed into a
resonant-level model, from which the correct Kondo physical properties
(specific heat, spin susceptibility, and an enhanced Wilson ratio) are easily
rederived. Finally, a brief discussion is given to relate these theoretical
results to observations in () alloys, which show
single-impurity critical behavior consistent with our predictions.Comment: 26 pages, revtex, no figure. Some corrections have been made, but the
basic results are kept. To be published in Physical Review
Non-Fermi liquid behavior in an extended Anderson model
An extended Anderson model, including screening channels (non-hybridizing,
but interacting with the local orbit), is studied within the Anderson-Yuval
approach, originally devised for the single-channel Kondo problem. By comparing
the perturbation expansions of this model and a generalized resonant level
model, the spin-spin correlation functions are calculated which show non-Fermi
liquid exponent depending on the strength of the scattering potential. The
relevance of this result to experiments in some heavy fermion systems is
briefly discussed.Comment: REVTEX, 17 pages, no figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Dynamics of disordered heavy Fermion systems
Dynamics of the disordered heavy Fermion model of Dobrosavljevic et al. are
calculated using an expression for the spectral function of the Anderson model
which is consistent with quantum Monte Carlo results. We compute the
self-energy for three distributions of Kondo scales including the distribution
of Bernal et al. for UCu{5-x}Pd{x}. The corresponding low temperature optical
conductivity shows a low-frequency pseudogap, a negative optical mass
enhancement, and a linear in frequency transport scattering rate, consistent
with results in Y{1-x}U{x}Pd{3} and UCu{5-x}Pd{x}.Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX and 4 PS figure
Block of NMDA receptor channels by endogenous neurosteroids: implications for the agonist induced conformational states of the channel vestibule
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) mediate synaptic plasticity, and their dysfunction is implicated in multiple brain disorders. NMDARs can be allosterically modulated by numerous compounds, including endogenous neurosteroid pregnanolone sulfate. Here, we identify the molecular basis of the use-dependent and voltage-independent inhibitory effect of neurosteroids on NMDAR responses. The site of action is located at the extracellular vestibule of the receptor's ion channel pore and is accessible after receptor activation. Mutations in the extracellular vestibule in the SYTANLAAF motif disrupt the inhibitory effect of negatively charged steroids. In contrast, positively charged steroids inhibit mutated NMDAR responses in a voltage-dependent manner. These results, in combination with molecular modeling, characterize structure details of the open configuration of the NMDAR channel. Our results provide a unique opportunity for the development of new therapeutic neurosteroid-based ligands to treat diseases associated with dysfunction of the glutamate system
Singular Fermi Liquids
An introductory survey of the theoretical ideas and calculations and the
experimental results which depart from Landau Fermi-liquids is presented.
Common themes and possible routes to the singularities leading to the breakdown
of Landau Fermi liquids are categorized following an elementary discussion of
the theory. Soluble examples of Singular Fermi liquids (often called Non-Fermi
liquids) include models of impurities in metals with special symmetries and
one-dimensional interacting fermions. A review of these is followed by a
discussion of Singular Fermi liquids in a wide variety of experimental
situations and theoretical models. These include the effects of low-energy
collective fluctuations, gauge fields due either to symmetries in the
hamiltonian or possible dynamically generated symmetries, fluctuations around
quantum critical points, the normal state of high temperature superconductors
and the two-dimensional metallic state. For the last three systems, the
principal experimental results are summarized and the outstanding theoretical
issues highlighted.Comment: 170 pages; submitted to Physics Reports; a single pdf file with high
quality figures is available from http://www.lorentz.leidenuniv.nl/~saarloo
Scaling Law for a Magnetic Impurity Model with Two-Body Hybridization
We consider a magnetic impurity coupled to the hybridizing and screening
channels of a conduction band. The model is solved in the framework of poor
man's scaling and Cardy's generalized theories. We point out that it is
important to include a two-body hybridization if the scaling theory is to be
valid for the band width larger than . We map out the boundary of the
Fermi-non-Fermi liquid phase transition as a function of the model parameters.Comment: 14 pages, latex, 1 figure included
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