With the goal of investigating dynamical features of hydrophobic cores of proteins over a wide range of temperatures, the chicken villin headpiece subdomain protein (HP36) was labeled at a "single" site corresponding to any one of the two C(delta)D(3) groups of leucine-69, which is located in a key position of the core. The main techniques employed are deuteron NMR quadrupolar echo line shape analysis, and T(1Z) (Zeeman) and T(1Q) (quadrupolar order) relaxation experiments performed at 11.7 and 17.6 T over the temperature range of 112 to 298 K. The experimental data are compared with computer simulations. The deuteron line shapes give an excellent fit to a three-mode motional model that consists of (a) fast three-site rotational jumps about the pseudo C(3) methyl spinning axis, (b) slower reorientation of the spinning axis, described by diffusion along a restricted arc, and (c) large angle jumps between traces of rotameric conformers. Relaxation behavior is described by a phenomenological distribution of activation energies for three-site hops at high temperatures that collapses to a single, distinctly smaller value for lower temperatures.
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ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
December 2024
Faculty of Materials Sciences and Engineering, Warsaw University of Technology, Warsaw 02-507, Poland.
The microvascular bed plays a crucial role in establishing nutrient exchange and waste removal, as well as maintaining tissue metabolic activity in the human body. However, achieving microvascularization of engineered 3D tissue constructs is still an unsolved challenge. In this work, we developed biomimetic cell-laden hydrogel microfibers recapitulating oriented microvascular capillary-like networks by using a 3D bioprinting technique combined with microfluidics-assisted coaxial wet-spinning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
October 2024
Univ Lyon, Ens de Lyon, Univ Claude Bernard, CNRS, Laboratoire de Physique, F-69342 Lyon, France.
It is well known that two permanent magnets of fixed orientation will either always repel or attract one another regardless of the distance between them. However, if one magnet is rotated at sufficient speed, a stable position at a given equilibrium distance can exist for a second free magnet. The equilibrium is produced by magnetic forces alone, which are strong enough to maintain a levitating state under gravity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Math Phys
November 2024
Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Boltzmanngasse 3, 1090 Vienna, Austria.
How can detector click probabilities respond to spatial rotations around a fixed axis, in any possible physical theory? Here, we give a thorough mathematical analysis of this question in terms of "rotation boxes", which are analogous to the well-known notion of non-local boxes. We prove that quantum theory admits the most general rotational correlations for spins 0, 1/2, and 1, but we describe a metrological game where beyond-quantum resources of spin 3/2 outperform all quantum resources of the same spin. We prove a multitude of fundamental results about these correlations, including an exact convex characterization of the spin-1 correlations, a Tsirelson-type inequality for spins 3/2 and higher, and a proof that the general spin- correlations provide an efficient outer SDP approximation to the quantum set.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNano Lett
November 2024
Departament de Física de la Matèria Condensada, Universitat de Barcelona, Av. Diagonal 647, 08028 Barcelona, Spain.
Magnetic nano/microrotors are passive elements spinning around an axis due to an external rotating field while remaining confined to a plane. They have been used to date in different applications related to fluid mixing, drug delivery, or biomedicine. Here we realize an active version of a magnetic microgyroscope which is simultaneously driven by a photoactivated catalytic reaction and a rotating magnetic field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2024
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Chang Gung University, Taipei, Taiwan.
The optomechanical motion of a gold nanoparticle (GNP) dimer-a pair of optically bound GNPs-in fluid, manipulated by a Bessel beam, is theoretically studied using the multiple multipole (MMP) method. Since a Bessel beam possesses orbital angular momentum (OAM) and spin angular momentum (SAM) simultaneously, complicated rigid-body motions of the dimer can be induced. The mechanism involves the equilibrium between the optical force with the reactive drag force exerted by the fluid.
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