Cytoadhesion of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes to the microvascular endothelial lining shares striking similarities to cytoadhesion of leukocytes. In both cases, adhesins are presented in structures that raise them above the cell surface. Another similarity is the enhancement of adhesion under physical force (catch bonding).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this report we review the possibilities of using colloids with surface mobile linkers for the study of colloidal self-assembly processes. A promising route to create systems with mobile linkers is the use of lipid (bi-)layers. These lipid layers can be either used in the form of vesicles or as coatings for hard colloids and emulsion droplets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElementary processes like energy transfer, charge transport, and exciton diffusion in thin films occur on time scales of femtoseconds. Time-resolved photo-electron spectroscopy, a technique limited to ultra-high vacuum environment and the proper choice of a substrate, has been used to study ultrafast processes in sub-nanometer thin films so far. Herein we show that a transient (population) grating created by the interference of laser pulses can be used to study ultrafast processes in such films under ambient conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing an in situ combination of tensile tests and x-ray diffraction, we have determined the mechanical properties of both the crystalline and the disordered phase of the biological nanocomposite silk by adapting a model from linear viscoelastic theory to the semicrystalline morphology of silk. We observe a strong interplay between morphology and mechanical properties. Silk's high extensibility results principally from the disordered phase; however, the crystals are also elastically deformed.
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