The structural evolution of hierarchical structures of nanoscale biomolecules is crucial for the construction of functional networks in vivo and in vitro. Despite the ubiquity of these networks, the physical mechanisms behind their formation and self-assembly remains poorly understood. Here, this study uses photochemically cross-linked folded protein hydrogels as a model biopolymer network system, with a combined time-resolved rheology and small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) approach to probe both the load-bearing structures and network architectures respectively thereby providing a cross-length scale understanding of the network formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlmost four decades after the identification of the AKT protein and understanding of its role in cancer, barriers remain in the translation of AKT inhibitors for clinical applications. Here, we provide new molecular insight into the first step of AKT activation where AKT binds to the plasma membrane and its orientation is stabilized in a bilayer with lateral heterogeneity (L-L phase coexistence). We have applied molecular dynamic simulations and molecular and cell biology approaches, and demonstrate that AKT recruitment to the membrane requires a second binding site in the AKT pleckstrin homology (PH) domain that acts cooperatively with the known canonical binding site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater quality and the carbon cycle in lakes are strongly related to the concentration of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Several regional algorithms have been proposed to remotely retrieve lake DOC concentration at a regional scale, but further efforts are needed to reliably retrieve DOC concentration over a large area. Based on bio-optical measurements from 55 lakes across China, this study investigates feasible satellite algorithms for retrieving DOC concentrations from OLCI/Sentinel-3 imagery.
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