Distance measurements by pulse electron paramagnetic resonance techniques are increasingly applied to multiple-spin systems. In the double electron-electron resonance experiment, more than two dipolar coupled spins manifest in an increased total modulation depth and in sum and difference dipolar frequency contributions that give rise to additional peaks appearing in the distance distribution, which do not correspond to the real interspin distances of the system and are hence referred to as ghost contributions. These ghost contributions may be so prominent that they might be mistaken for real distance peaks or that real distance peaks shift their position or disappear. We present a simple approximate procedure to suppress ghost distances to a great extent by manipulating the experimentally obtained form factor during data analysis by a simple power scaling with a scaling exponent ζ(N) = 1/(1-N), with N being the number of coupled spins in the system. This approach requires neither further experimental effort nor exact knowledge about labelling and inversion efficiency. This should enable routine application to biological systems. The approach is validated on simulated test cases for up to five spins and applied to synthetic model samples. The suppression of ghost distances with the presented approach works best for symmetric geometries and rigid molecules which, at the same time, are the cases where ghost contributions are most disturbing. The distance distributions obtained by power scaling are consistent with distributions that were obtained with previously obtained alternative approaches and agree, in some cases, strikingly well with the expectations for the true interspin distance distributions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c3cp44462g | DOI Listing |
Chembiochem
November 2024
Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russian Federation.
Glycosphingolipids (GSL) are functionally important components of the cell membrane and recognition of their glycan "head" by the immune system is a key part of normal and pathological processes. Recognition of glycolipid antigens on a living cell, their structure, "context" (microenvironment and clustering), presentation including orientation and distance from the plasma membrane, as well as molecular dynamics are important. GSL antigens are targets for the development of anticancer vaccines and therapeutic antibodies, therefore, control of the presentation of their glycans by synthetic methods opens up new possibilities in medicine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor previous three-dimensional ghost imaging, the acquisition of absolute distance information is mainly based on the principle of time-of-flight, which usually needs lots of measurements and a large detection/modulation bandwidth product. Here we present a technique called three-dimensional ghost imaging via the Scheimpflug detection (3D-GISD), which exploits the principle of a similar binocular stereoscopic vision for distance information acquisition and can dramatically reduce the measurements required for high-quality 3D image reconstruction. The experimental results demonstrate that high-quality 3D-GISD can be still obtained even if the target exceeds the depth of field of Scheimpflug imaging system and less than 500 measurements are adopted for an image with 128×128 pixels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGhost imaging enables the imaging of an object using intensity correlations between a single-pixel detector placed behind the object and a camera that records the light that did not interact with the object. The object and the camera are often placed at conjugate planes to ensure correlated illumination patterns. Here, we show how the combined effect of optical reciprocity and the memory effect in a random medium gives rise to correlations between two beams that traverse the random medium in opposite directions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
October 2024
Collaborative Innovation Center of Steel Technology, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China.
The use of a rapid heating method to achieve heterogeneity of Mn in medium-manganese steel and improve its comprehensive performance has been widely studied and these techniques have been widely applied. However, the heating rate (from α to γ) has not received sufficient attention with respect to its microstructure-evolution mechanism. In this study, the effect of heating rate on the microstructure evolution and hardness of heterogeneous medium-manganese steel was investigated by using X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and DICTRA simulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoins Pediatr Pueric
October 2024
Hôpital Ville-Évrad, 10 rue du Général-Leclerc, 93370 Montfermeil, France. Electronic address:
Incest and incestuality bring us back to anto-edipal families and the presence of unprocessed transgenerational elements. Clinicians working with these families and patients are tested in their counter-transference. Nevertheless, what a "gratification" it is when patients regain greater autonomy, self-esteem and desire.
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