Publications by authors named "Elisa Floris"

Eukaryotic cells maintain their inner order by a hectic process of sorting and distillation of molecular factors taking place on their lipid membranes. A similar sorting process is implied in the assembly and budding of enveloped viruses. To understand the properties of this molecular sorting process, we have recently proposed a physical model [Zamparo et al.

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Molecular sorting is a fundamental process that allows eukaryotic cells to distill and concentrate specific chemical factors in appropriate cell membrane subregions, thus endowing them with different chemical identities and functional properties. A phenomenological theory of this molecular distillation process has recently been proposed [M. Zamparo, D.

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Compartmentalization of cellular functions is at the core of the physiology of eukaryotic cells. Recent evidences indicate that a universal organizing process - phase separation - supports the partitioning of biomolecules in distinct phases from a single homogeneous mixture, a landmark event in both the biogenesis and the maintenance of membrane and non-membrane-bound organelles. In the cell, 'passive' (non energy-consuming) mechanisms are flanked by 'active' mechanisms of separation into phases of distinct density and stoichiometry, that allow for increased partitioning flexibility and programmability.

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