Publications by authors named "S J Connell"

Waxes comprise a diverse set of materials from lubricants and coatings to biological materials such as the intracuticular wax layers on plant leaves that restrict water loss to inhibit dehydration. Despite the often mixed hydrocarbon chain lengths and functional groups within waxes, they show a propensity for ordering into crystalline phases, albeit with a wealth of solid solution behavior and disorder modes that determine chemical transport and mechanical properties. Here, we reveal the microscopic structure and heterogeneity of replica leaf wax models based on the dominant wax types in the plant, namely CH and CHOH and their binary mixtures.

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  • A study investigates whether marine herbivores are better off as generalists or specialists when faced with rapid environmental changes like ocean warming and acidification.
  • The research shows that generalists tend to narrow their dietary range while specialists expand theirs in response to changing food resources, leading to greater overlap in their niches.
  • Despite having the ability to adapt, both types face risks with climate change, particularly specialists, whose biomass risks collapsing even when conditions seem favorable.
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  • Seafood is a key source of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), but the fatty acid content in many fish species is under-researched due to high costs of obtaining commercial fillets.
  • The study found that breast tissue from three coral reef fish species can reliably estimate the fatty acid content in fish fillets, showing strong and consistent relationships.
  • Using fish by-products for research not only reduces costs and food waste but also promotes further studies on omega-3 content, especially in tropical areas with high deficiency rates.
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  • * This research marks the first discovery of kaolinite or halloysite on another planet, alongside findings of dehydrated minerals indicating possible intense alteration processes.
  • * The rocks' formation likely resulted from intense water activity followed by heating and dehydration, possibly linked to impact events that dispersed the materials across the crater.
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Almost 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.

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