Search results for "alignment"

showing 10 items of 627 documents

Optically Probed Laser-Induced Field-Free Molecular Alignment

2011

Molecular alignment induced by laser fields has been investigated in research laboratories for over two decades. It led to a better understanding of the fundamental processes at play in the interaction of strong laser fields with molecules, and also provided significant contributions to the fields of high harmonic generation, laser spectroscopy, and laser filamentation. In this chapter, we discuss molecular alignment produced under field-free conditions, as resulting from the interaction of a laser pulse of duration shorter than the rotational period of the molecule. The experimental results presented will be confined to the optically probed alignment of linear as well as asymmetric top mol…

Materials scienceField (physics)business.industryPhysics::OpticsLaserlaw.inventionFilamentationlawOptoelectronicsHigh harmonic generationMoleculeSpecial careMolecular alignmentbusinessSpectroscopy
researchProduct

Better Actuation Through Chemistry: Using Surface Coatings to Create Uniform Director Fields in Nematic Liquid Crystal Elastomers.

2016

Controlling the molecular alignment of liquid crystal monomers (LCMs) within nano- and microstructures is essential in manipulating the actuation behavior of nematic liquid crystal elastomers (NLCEs). Here, we study how to induce uniformly vertical alignment of nematic LCMs within a micropillar array to maximize the macroscopic shape change using surface chemistry. Landau-de Gennes numerical modeling suggests that it is difficult to perfectly align LCMs vertically in every pore within a poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) mold with porous channels during soft lithography. In an untreated PDMS mold that provides homeotropic anchoring of LCMs, a radially escaped configuration of LCMs is observed. V…

Materials scienceHomeotropic alignmentAnchoringNanotechnology02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyElastomerMethacrylate01 natural sciencesSoft lithography0104 chemical sciencesPlanarLiquid crystalNano-General Materials ScienceComposite material0210 nano-technologyACS applied materialsinterfaces
researchProduct

Strain Measurement on Composites: Errors due to Rosette Misalignment

2002

Electrical resistance strain gauges are increasingly used for the determination of the strain field in composite components. The effect of the angular misalignment of a strain gauge rosette on the determination of the strains in a composite material is investigated in this paper. The theoretical analysis shows that the strain error along the principal material directions depends on the difference of principal strains, on the angular misalignment of the rosette and on the angle between the maximum principal strain and the fibre direction. The paper also shows experimental evidence for the theoretical analysis.

Mechanics of MaterialsMechanical Engineeringcomposites strain gauges misalignment errorSettore ING-IND/15 - Disegno E Metodi Dell'Ingegneria Industriale
researchProduct

(19)F NMR screening of unrelated antimicrobial peptides shows that membrane interactions are largely governed by lipids.

2014

AbstractMany amphiphilic antimicrobial peptides permeabilize bacterial membranes via successive steps of binding, re-alignment and/or oligomerization. Here, we have systematically compared the lipid interactions of two structurally unrelated peptides: the cyclic β-pleated gramicidin S (GS), and the α-helical PGLa. 19F NMR was used to screen their molecular alignment in various model membranes over a wide range of temperatures. Both peptides were found to respond to the phase state and composition of these different samples in a similar way. In phosphatidylcholines, both peptides first bind to the bilayer surface. Above a certain threshold concentration they can re-align and immerse more dee…

Membrane lipidsAntimicrobial peptidesAmphiphilic antimicrobial peptidesLipid BilayersBiophysicsBiochemistryProtein Structure Secondarychemistry.chemical_compoundMembrane LipidsHumansAmino Acid SequenceProtein PrecursorsLipid bilayerNuclear Magnetic Resonance BiomolecularBacteriaBilayerPeripheral membrane proteinLipid compositionCell MembraneGramicidinBiological membraneRe-alignment in membraneCell BiologyMembraneBiochemistrychemistryGramicidinBiophysicsBacterial membranesSpontaneous curvatureSolid state 19F NMR structure analysis
researchProduct

Genes and derived amino acid sequences of S-layer proteins from mesophilic, thermophilic, and extremely thermophilic methanococci

2002

Cells of methanococci are covered by a single layer of protein subunits (S-layer) in hexagonal arrangement, which are directly exposed to the environment and which cannot be stabilized by cellular components. We have isolated S-layer proteins from cells of Methanococcus vannielii ( T(opt.)=37 degrees C), Methanococcus thermolithotrophicus ( T(opt.)=65 degrees C), and Methanococcus jannaschii ( T(opt.)=85 degrees C). The primary structure of the S-layer proteins was determined by sequencing the corresponding genes. According to the predicted amino acid sequence, the molecular masses of the S-layer proteins of the different methanococci are in a small range between 59,064 and 60,547 Da. Compa…

MethanococcusArchaeal ProteinsMethanococcusMolecular Sequence DataMicrobiologySpecies SpecificityMethanococcalesAmino Acid SequencePeptide sequencechemistry.chemical_classificationSequence Homology Amino AcidbiologyThermophileTemperatureProtein primary structureGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationMethanococciAmino acidchemistryBiochemistryGenes BacterialMolecular MedicineSequence AlignmentS-layerBacterial Outer Membrane ProteinsExtremophiles
researchProduct

CUDASW++ 3.0: accelerating Smith-Waterman protein database search by coupling CPU and GPU SIMD instructions

2013

Background The maximal sensitivity for local alignments makes the Smith-Waterman algorithm a popular choice for protein sequence database search based on pairwise alignment. However, the algorithm is compute-intensive due to a quadratic time complexity. Corresponding runtimes are further compounded by the rapid growth of sequence databases. Results We present CUDASW++ 3.0, a fast Smith-Waterman protein database search algorithm, which couples CPU and GPU SIMD instructions and carries out concurrent CPU and GPU computations. For the CPU computation, this algorithm employs SSE-based vector execution units as accelerators. For the GPU computation, we have investigated for the first time a GPU …

Methodology ArticleGPUCUDASoftware_PROGRAMMINGTECHNIQUESBiochemistryComputer Science ApplicationsSmith-WatermanConcurrent executionSequence Analysis ProteinPTX SIMD instructionsDatabases ProteinMolecular BiologySequence AlignmentAlgorithmsSoftwareBMC Bioinformatics
researchProduct

HECTOR : a parallel multistage homopolymer spectrum based error corrector for 454 sequencing data

2014

Background Current-generation sequencing technologies are able to produce low-cost, high-throughput reads. However, the produced reads are imperfect and may contain various sequencing errors. Although many error correction methods have been developed in recent years, none explicitly targets homopolymer-length errors in the 454 sequencing reads. Results We present HECTOR, a parallel multistage homopolymer spectrum based error corrector for 454 sequencing data. In this algorithm, for the first time we have investigated a novel homopolymer spectrum based approach to handle homopolymer insertions or deletions, which are the dominant sequencing errors in 454 pyrosequencing reads. We have evaluat…

Methodology ArticleParallelization454 sequencingHigh-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing004 InformatikBiochemistryComputer Science ApplicationsHomopolymer-length errorNGS error correctionSequence AlignmentMolecular BiologyAlgorithmsSoftware004 Data processing
researchProduct

Cloning and functional analysis of cDNA encoding the hamster Bcl-2 protein.

2000

We have cloned cDNA encoding hamster Bcl-2 protein from total RNA of CHO-9 cells by RT-PCR using oligonucleotide primers sharing homology with the sequence of mouse and rat bcl-2. The fragments spanning the total coding region were cloned into pCR4-TOPO and sequenced for verification. The hamster bcl-2 cDNA has a size of 711 nucleotides and encodes a polypeptide of 236 amino acids. Hamster Bcl-2 shares 95.8 and 88.6% similarity with mouse and human Bcl-2, respectively. Northern blot analysis revealed a single 7.5 kb bcl-2 transcript in hamster (CHO-9), mouse (BK4), and rat (H5) cells and a 8.5 kb bcl-2 mRNA in human (HeLa MR) cells. The bcl-2 cDNA (771 bp) was recloned into pcDNA3 and the r…

MethylnitronitrosoguanidineDNA ComplementaryAlkylationMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsHamsterBiologyTransfectionBiochemistryCell LineComplementary DNACricetinaeCoding regionAnimalsHumansNorthern blotAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyCloningMessenger RNABase SequenceCell DeathSequence Homology Amino AcidChinese hamster ovary cellCell BiologyTransfectionMolecular biologyProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2CarcinogensSequence AlignmentBiochemical and biophysical research communications
researchProduct

A nuclear ribosomal DNA pseudogene in triatomines opens a new research field of fundamental and applied implications in Chagas disease

2015

A pseudogene, designated as "ps(5.8S+ITS-2)", paralogous to the 5.8S gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS)-2 of the nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA), has been recently found in many triatomine species distributed throughout North America, Central America and northern South America. Among characteristics used as criteria for pseudogene verification, secondary structures and free energy are highlighted, showing a lower fit between minimum free energy, partition function and centroid structures, although in given cases the fit only appeared to be slightly lower. The unique characteristics of "ps(5.8S+ITS-2)" as a processed or retrotransposed pseudogenic unit of the ghost type are reviewed, wi…

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaselcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicinelcsh:RC955-962Pseudogenelcsh:QR1-502Sequence alignmentGenes InsectBiologylcsh:MicrobiologyPhylogeneticsDNA Ribosomal SpacerAnimalsInternal transcribed spacerRibosomal DNAGeneTriatominaefunctionalityPhylogenyGeneticssecondary structuresPhylogenetic treerDNA pseudogeneArticlesSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationfree energyInsect VectorsRNA Ribosomal 5.8StriatominesTriatominaeSequence AlignmentPseudogenesMemórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
researchProduct

Identification of a polyketide synthase gene (pksP) of Aspergillus fumigatus involved in conidial pigment biosynthesis and virulence.

1998

Aspergillus fumigatus is an important pathogen of the immunocompromised host causing pneumonia and invasive disseminated disease with high mortality. Previously, we identified a mutant strain (white, W) lacking conidial pigmentation and, in addition, the conidia showed a smooth surface morphology, whereas wild-type (WT) conidia are grey-green and have a typical ornamentation. W conidia appeared to be less protected against killing by the host defence, e.g., were more susceptible to oxidants in vitro and more efficiently damaged by human monocytes in vitro than WT conidia. When compared to the WT, the W mutant strain showed reduced virulence in a murine animal model. Genetic analysis suggest…

Microbiology (medical)MaleImmunologyMutantGenes FungalMolecular Sequence DataVirulenceMicrobiologyAspergillus fumigatusFungal ProteinsMiceMultienzyme ComplexesPolyketide synthaseImmunology and AllergyAnimalsAmino Acid SequencePathogenGenomic LibrarybiologyBase SequenceVirulenceAspergillus fumigatusfungiWild typeGeneral MedicinePigments Biologicalbiology.organism_classificationSpecific Pathogen-Free OrganismsComplementationTransformation (genetics)Microscopy Electronbiology.proteinSequence AlignmentMedical microbiology and immunology
researchProduct