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      Stochastic Study of the Effect of Ionic Strength on Noncovalent Interactions in Protein Pores

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      Biophysical Journal
      The Biophysical Society

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          Abstract

          Salt plays a critical role in the physiological activities of cells. We show that ionic strength significantly affects the kinetics of noncovalent interactions in protein channels, as observed in stochastic studies of the transfer of various analytes through pores of wild-type and mutant α-hemolysin proteins. As the ionic strength increased, the association rate constant of electrostatic interactions was accelerated, whereas those of both hydrophobic and aromatic interactions were retarded. Dramatic decreases in the dissociation rate constants, and thus increases in the overall reaction formation constants, were observed for all noncovalent interactions studied. The results suggest that with the increase of salt concentration, the streaming potentials for all the protein pores decrease, whereas the preferential selectivities of the pores for either cations or anions drop. Furthermore, results also show that the salt effect on the rate of association of analytes to a pore differs significantly depending on the nature of the noncovalent interactions occurring in the protein channel. In addition to providing new insights into the nature of analyte-protein pore interactions, the salt-dependence of noncovalent interactions in protein pores observed provides a useful means to greatly enhance the sensitivity of the nanopore, which may find useful application in stochastic sensing.

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          Simple analytical expression for the peak-frequency shifts of plasmonic resonances for sensing

          We derive a closed-form expression that accurately predicts the peak frequency-shift and broadening induced by tiny perturbations of plasmonic nanoresonators without critically relying on repeated electrodynamic simulations of the spectral response of nanoresonator for various locations, sizes or shapes of the perturbing objects. The force of the present approach, in comparison with other approaches of the same kind, is that the derivation is supported by a mathematical formalism based on a rigorous normalization of the resonance modes of nanoresonators consisting of lossy and dispersive materials. Accordingly, accurate predictions are obtained for a large range of nanoparticle shapes and sizes, used in various plasmonic nanosensors, even beyond the quasistatic limit. The expression gives quantitative insight, and combined with an open-source code, provides accurate and fast predictions that are ideally suited for preliminary designs or for interpretation of experimental data. It is also valid for photonic resonators with large mode volumes.
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            Probing quantum confinement within single core-multishell nanowires

            Theoretically core-multishell nanowires under a cross-section of hexagonal geometry should exhibit peculiar confinement effects. Using a hard X-ray nanobeam, here we show experimental evidence for carrier localization phenomena at the hexagon corners by combining synchrotron excited optical luminescence with simultaneous X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy. Applied to single coaxial n-GaN/InGaN multiquantum-well/p-GaN nanowires, our experiment narrows the gap between optical microscopy and high-resolution X-ray imaging, and calls for further studies on the underlying mechanisms of optoelectronic nanodevices.
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              Gaussian-3 (G3) theory for molecules containing first and second-row atoms

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biophys J
                biophysj
                Biophysical Journal
                The Biophysical Society
                0006-3495
                1542-0086
                15 February 2008
                9 November 2007
                15 February 2008
                : 94
                : 4
                : 1267-1275
                Affiliations
                Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas 76019-0065
                Author notes

                Address reprint requests to Xiyun Guan, E-mail: xguan@ 123456uta.edu .

                Article
                117598
                10.1529/biophysj.107.117598
                2212693
                17993487
                65425799-c1c3-4ba0-978b-1baa2e0f7a5f
                Copyright © 2008, Biophysical Society

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons-Attribution Noncommercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/), which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 16 July 2007
                : 18 October 2007
                Categories
                Channels, Receptors, and Electrical Signaling

                Biophysics
                Biophysics

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