Search results for "interfaces"
showing 10 items of 1258 documents
A spatially resolved investigation of oxygen adsorption on polycrystalline copper and titanium by means of photoemission electron microscopy
2004
Abstract The interaction of oxygen with polycrystalline copper and titanium surfaces was studied by means of photoemission electron microscopy. Variations in the image brightness were used to determine the work function of different Cu crystallites. The change of the work function was monitored during oxygen adsorption on both, Cu and Ti. Those changes are smooth for Cu whereas different Ti crystallites exhibit a rather complicated behavior during oxygen adsorption. The transformation of brightness versus exposure curves into work function versus coverage curves allows to determine the initial dipole moment of the adsorbed oxygen atoms. A value of about 20 mD was found for O on Cu(1 1 0). V…
Specific recognition and formation of two- dimensional streptavidin domains in monolayers: applications to molecular devices
1989
Abstract By virtue of the high-affinity specific interaction between the vitamin, biotin, and the protein, streptavidin, monolayers of synthetic lipids with biotin headgroups can tightly bind streptavidin at the lipid-water interface. Through this specific recognition fluorescently-labelled streptavidin spontaneously organizes in the plane of the interface to form large protein domains, directly visible in situ by fluorescence microscopy and exhibiting optical anisotropy. Further structural characterization has shown that these domains are two-dimensional protein crystals. Correlation with the known three-dimensional crystal structure of streptavidin indicates that two of streptavidin's fou…
Pressure dependent arrangement of a protein in two-dimensional crystals specifically bound to a monolayer
1993
Abstract The arrangement of streptavidin bound to a biotinylated monolayer of a polymeric amphiphile at the air-water interface is studied as a function of lateral pressure or ligand density. Closely packed domains are observed by fluorescence microscopy. The arrangement of the protein in these domains is sensitively detected by X-ray reflectivity and an especially thorough data analysis yields the following: the distance of the protein from the air-monolayer interface varies with lateral pressure by 10 A; the interfaces involving the protein are much rougher than expected due to capillary waves; the electron density of the protein layer increases considerably on compression, which can be u…
Molecular recognition processes at functionalized lipid surfaces: a neutron reflectivity study
1992
The specific binding of proteins to functionalized monolayers on aqueous subphases has been characterized by neutron reflectivity measurements. As a model for the investigation of a recognition process on a molecular length scale, streptavidin (SA) and biotin were chosen because of the high specific affinity between them. Reflectivities from the aqueous (NaCl/H2O or NaCl/D2O) surfaces covered with the biotin-lipid monolayers before and after the adsorption of proteins were collected with a novel, fixed wavelength liquid surface neutron reflectometer. In quantitative terms, binding was found to occur at a biotin surface concentration as low as 1 molecule/1250 A2 (compare to ∼ 1 molecule/40 A…
Adsorption and Conformation Behavior of Biotinylated Fibronectin on Streptavidin-Modified TiOX Surfaces Studied by SPR and AFM
2011
It is well-known that protein-modified implant surfaces such as TiO(2) show a higher bioconductivity. Fibronectin is a glycoprotein from the extracellular matrix (ECM) with a major role in cell adhesion. It can be applied on titanium oxide surfaces to accelerate implant integration. Not only the surface concentration but also the presentation of the protein plays an important role for the cellular response. We were able to show that TiO(X) surfaces modified with biotinylated fibronectin adsorbed on a streptavidin-silane self-assembly multilayer system are more effective regarding osteoblast adhesion than surfaces modified with nonspecifically bound fibronectin. The adsorption and conformati…
Reactive Surface Coatings Based on Polysilsesquioxanes: Controlled Functionalization for Specific Protein Immobilization
2009
The key designing in reliable biosensors is the preparation of thin films in which biomolecular functions may be immobilized and addressed in a controlled and reproducible manner. This requires the controlled preparation of specific binding sites on planar surfaces. Poly(methylsilsesquioxane)-poly(pentafluorophenyl acrylates) (PMSSQ-PFPA) are promising materials to produce stable and adherent thin reactive coatings on various substrates. Those reactive surface coatings could be applied onto various materials, for example, gold, polycarbonate (PC), poly(tetrafluoroethylene) (PTFE), and glass. By dipping those substrates in a solution of a desired amine, specific binding sites for protein ads…
Layer-by-Layer Assembly of a Streptavidin–Fibronectin Multilayer on Biotinylated TiOX
2013
The biomodification of surfaces, especially titanium, is an important issue in current biomedical research. Regarding titanium, it is also important to ensure a specific protein modification of its surface because here protein binding that is too random can be observed. Specific nanoscale architectures can be applied to overcome this problem. As recently shown, streptavidin can be used as a coupling agent to immobilize biotinylated fibronectin (bFn) on a TiO(X) surface. Because of the conformation of adsorbed biotinylated fibronectin on a streptavidin monolayer, it is possible to adsorb more streptavidin and biotinylated fibronectin layers. On this basis, an alternating protein multilayer c…
Molecular recognition in biotin-streptavidin systems and analogues at the air-water interface
1992
Abstract Specific interaction between biotin and the protein streptavidin in monolayers of synthetic lipids with biotin headgroups has been shown to lead to formation of highly ordered two-dimensional streptavidin crystals. The same behaviour is observed when using desthiobiotin as lipid headgroup which exhibits a significantly lower binding constant compared with biotin (5 × 10 13 M -1 compared with 10 15 M -1 ). This offers the possibility of detaching competetively the 2D crystalline streptavidin layer by addition of free biotin to the aqueous phase. Use of lipoic acid as lipid headgroup ( K a = 7 × 10 7 M −1 ) leads to formation of small snisotropic protein domains indicating a crystall…
Visualization in comparative music research
2007
Computational analysis of large musical corpora provides an approach that overcomes some of the limitations of manual analysis related to small sample sizes and subjectivity. The present paper aims to provide an overview of the computational approach to music research. It discusses the issues of music representation, musical feature extraction, digital music collections, and data mining techniques. Moreover, it provides examples of visualization of large musical collections.
Thermal, electric and spin transport in superconductor/ferromagnetic-insulator structures
2019
A ferromagnetic insulator (FI) attached to a conventional superconductor (S) changes drastically the properties of the latter. Specifically, the exchange field at the FI/S interface leads to a splitting of the superconducting density of states. If S is a superconducting film, thinner than the superconducting coherence length, the modification of the density of states occurs over the whole sample. The co-existence of the exchange splitting and superconducting correlations in S/FI structures leads to striking transport phenomena that are of interest for applications in thermoelectricity, superconducting spintronics and radiation sensors. Here we review the most recent progress in understandin…