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1.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 34(27)2022 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35453138

ABSTRACT

We predict a novel topological state,half-topological state, in magnetic topological insulators. The topological state is characterized by different topologies of electrons with different spin orientations, i.e., electrons with one spin orientation occupy a nontrivial topological insulating state, while electrons with opposite orientation occupy another insulating state with trivial topology. We demonstrate the occurrence of the half-topological state in magnetic topological insulators by employing a minimal model. The minimal model is a combination of the spinful Haldane and the double-exchange models. The double-exchange processes maintain a spontaneous magnetic ordering, while the next-nearest-neighbor hopping in the Haldane model gives rise to a nontrivial topological insulator. The minimal model is studied by applying the dynamical mean field theory. It is found that the long-range antiferromagnetic ordering drives the system from either topological or topologically trivial antiferromagnetic insulator to the half-topological state, and finally to topologically trivial antiferromagnetic insulator. The equations for the topological phase transitions are also explicitly derived.

2.
J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol ; 39(4): 641-7, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22089966

ABSTRACT

Glyphosate herbicide-resistant crop plants, introduced commercially in 1994, now represent approximately 85% of the land area devoted to transgenic crops. Herbicide resistance in commercial glyphosate-resistant crops is due to expression of a variant form of a bacterial 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase with a significantly decreased binding affinity for glyphosate at the target site of the enzyme. As a result of widespread and recurrent glyphosate use, often as the only herbicide used for weed management, increasing numbers of weedy species have evolved resistance to glyphosate. Weed resistance is most often due to changes in herbicide translocation patterns, presumed to be through the activity of an as yet unidentified membrane transporter in plants. To provide insight into glyphosate resistance mechanisms and identify a potential glyphosate transporter, we screened Escherichia coli genomic DNA for alternate sources of glyphosate resistance genes. Our search identified a single non-target gene that, when overexpressed in E. coli and Pseudomonas, confers high-level glyphosate resistance. The gene, yhhS, encodes a predicted membrane transporter of the major facilitator superfamily involved in drug efflux. We report here that an alternative mode of glyphosate resistance in E. coli is due to reduced accumulation of glyphosate in cells that overexpress this membrane transporter and discuss the implications for potential alternative resistance mechanisms in other organisms such as plants.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/drug effects , Glycine/analogs & derivatives , Herbicide Resistance , Herbicides/pharmacology , 3-Phosphoshikimate 1-Carboxyvinyltransferase/chemistry , 3-Phosphoshikimate 1-Carboxyvinyltransferase/genetics , 3-Phosphoshikimate 1-Carboxyvinyltransferase/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Glycine/pharmacology , Molecular Sequence Data , Plants/drug effects , Plants/genetics , Sequence Alignment , Glyphosate
3.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 23(42): 425602, 2011 Oct 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21970980

ABSTRACT

We propose that competition between Kondo and magnetic correlations results in a novel universality class for heavy fermion quantum criticality in the presence of strong randomness. Starting from an Anderson lattice model with disorder, we derive an effective local field theory in the dynamical mean-field theory approximation, where randomness is introduced into both hybridization and Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interactions. Performing the saddle-point analysis in the U(1) slave-boson representation, we reveal its phase diagram which shows a quantum phase transition from a spin liquid state to a local Fermi liquid phase. In contrast with the clean limit case of the Anderson lattice model, the effective hybridization given by holon condensation turns out to vanish, resulting from the zero mean value of the hybridization coupling constant. However, we show that the holon density becomes finite when the variance of the hybridization is sufficiently larger than that of the RKKY coupling, giving rise to the Kondo effect. On the other hand, when the variance of the hybridization becomes smaller than that of the RKKY coupling, the Kondo effect disappears, resulting in a fully symmetric paramagnetic state, adiabatically connected to the spin liquid state of the disordered Heisenberg model. We investigate the quantum critical point beyond the mean-field approximation. Introducing quantum corrections fully self-consistently in the non-crossing approximation, we prove that the local charge susceptibility has exactly the same critical exponent as the local spin susceptibility, suggesting an enhanced symmetry at the local quantum critical point. This leads us to propose novel duality between the Kondo singlet phase and the critical local moment state beyond the Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson paradigm. The Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson forbidden duality serves the mechanism of electron fractionalization in critical impurity dynamics, where such fractionalized excitations are identified with topological excitations.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 105(11): 116403, 2010 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20867592

ABSTRACT

We find that competition between random Kondo and random magnetic correlations results in a quantum phase transition from a local Fermi liquid to a spin liquid. The local charge susceptibility turns out to have exactly the same critical exponent as the local spin susceptibility, suggesting a novel duality between the Kondo singlet phase and the critical local moment state beyond the Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson symmetry breaking framework. This leads us to propose an enhanced symmetry at the local quantum critical point, described by an O(4) vector for spin and charge. The symmetry enhancement serves as a mechanism of electron fractionalization in critical impurity dynamics, where such fractionalized excitations are identified with topological excitations.

5.
Plant Biotechnol J ; 4(5): 477-87, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17309724

ABSTRACT

Plants expressing Agrobacterium sp. strain CP4 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (CP4 EPSPS) are known to be resistant to glyphosate, a potent herbicide that inhibits the activity of the endogenous plant EPSPS. The RR1445 transgenic cotton line (current commercial line for Roundup Ready Cotton) was generated using the figwort mosaic virus (FMV) 35S promoter to drive the expression of the CP4 EPSPS gene, and has excellent vegetative tolerance to glyphosate. However, with high glyphosate application rates at developmental stages later than the four-leaf stage (late-stage applications: applications that are inconsistent with the Roundup labels), RR1445 shows male sterility. Another transgenic cotton line, RR60, was generated using the FMV 35S promoter and the Arabidopsis elongation factor-1alpha promoter (AtEF1alpha) for the expression of CP4 EPSPS. RR60 has excellent vegetative and reproductive tolerance to applications of glyphosate at all developmental stages. Histochemical analyses were conducted to examine the male reproductive development at the cellular level of these cotton lines in response to glyphosate applications, and to investigate the correlation between glyphosate injury and the expression of CP4 EPSPS in male reproductive tissues. The expression of CP4 EPSPS in RR60 was found to be strong in all male reproductive cell types. Conversely, CP4 EPSPS expression in RR1445 was low in pollen mother cells, male gametophytes and tapetum, three crucial male reproductive cell types. Our results indicate that the FMV 35S promoter, although expressing strongly in most vegetative tissues in plants, has extremely low activity in these cell types.


Subject(s)
3-Phosphoshikimate 1-Carboxyvinyltransferase/genetics , Genes, Plant , Glycine/analogs & derivatives , Gossypium/genetics , Herbicides , Gossypium/physiology , Mosaic Viruses/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Glyphosate
6.
Biomacromolecules ; 3(5): 1006-12, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12217047

ABSTRACT

In support of programs to identify polyhydroxyalkanoates with improved materials properties, we report on our efforts to characterize the mechanical and thermal properties of copolyesters of 3-hydroxybutyrate (3HB) and 3-hydroxyhexanoate (3HHx). The copolyesters, having molar fraction of 3HHx ranging from 2.5 to 35 mol % and average molecular weights ranging from 1.15 x 10(5) to 6.65 x 10(5), were produced by fermentation using Aeromonas hydrophila and a recombinant strain of Pseudomonas putida GPp104. The polymers were chloroform extracted and characterized by solution-state and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and a variety of mechanical and thermal tests. Solution-state (1)H NMR data were used to determine polymer composition-of-matter, while solution-state (13)C NMR data provided polymer-sequence information. Solvent fractionation and NMR spectroscopic characterization of these polymers showed that polymers containing up to 9.5 mol % 3HHx had a Bernoullian compositional distribution. By contrast, polymers containing more than 9.5 mol % 3HHx had a bimodal polymer composition. Solvent fractionation of these 3HHx-rich polyesters produced two polymer fractions, each of which was again consistent with Bernoullian polymerization statistics. Solid-state NMR relaxation experiments provided insight into aging in poly(3HB-co-3HHx) copolymers, demonstrating increased polymer-chain motion with increasing 3HHx content. The elongation-to-break ratio in the polyesters increased with increasing molar fraction of 3HHx monomers. Aging properties of the poly(3HB-co-3HHx) copolymers were very similar to copolymers of 3HB and 3-hydroxyvalerate (3HV). However, poly(3HB-co-3HHx) exhibited increased activation energy to thermal degradation with increasing 3HHx content.


Subject(s)
3-Hydroxybutyric Acid/chemistry , Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Caproates/chemistry , 3-Hydroxybutyric Acid/metabolism , Aeromonas hydrophila/metabolism , Biocompatible Materials/metabolism , Caproates/metabolism , Crystallization , Fermentation , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Materials Testing , Pseudomonas putida/metabolism , Stress, Mechanical , Temperature
7.
Plant Physiol ; 129(3): 1265-75, 2002 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12114580

ABSTRACT

The spontaneous occurrence of resistance to the herbicide glyphosate in weed species has been an extremely infrequent event, despite over 20 years of extensive use. Recently, a glyphosate-resistant biotype of goosegrass (Eleusine indica) was identified in Malaysia exhibiting an LD(50) value approximately 2- to 4-fold greater than the sensitive biotype collected from the same region. A comparison of the inhibition of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS) activity by glyphosate in extracts prepared from the resistant (R) and sensitive (S) biotypes revealed an approximately 5-fold higher IC(50)(glyphosate) for the (R) biotype. Sequence comparisons of the predicted EPSPS mature protein coding regions from both biotypes revealed four single-nucleotide differences, two of which result in amino acid changes. One of these changes, a proline to serine substitution at position 106 in the (R) biotype, corresponds to a substitution previously identified in a glyphosate-insensitive EPSPS enzyme from Salmonella typhimurium. Kinetic data generated for the recombinant enzymes suggests that the second substitution identified in the (R) EPSPS does not contribute significantly to its reduced glyphosate sensitivity. Escherichia coli aroA- (EPSPS deficient) strains expressing the mature EPSPS enzyme from the (R) biotype exhibited an approximately 3-fold increase in glyphosate tolerance relative to strains expressing the mature EPSPS from the (S) biotype. These results provide the first evidence for an altered EPSPS enzyme as an underlying component of evolved glyphosate resistance in any plant species.


Subject(s)
Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/genetics , Glycine/analogs & derivatives , Glycine/pharmacology , Herbicides/pharmacology , Poaceae/genetics , 3-Phosphoshikimate 1-Carboxyvinyltransferase , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , DNA, Complementary/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Drug Resistance/genetics , Escherichia coli/drug effects , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/growth & development , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Inhibitory Concentration 50 , Isoenzymes/genetics , Isoenzymes/metabolism , Kinetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Poaceae/drug effects , Poaceae/enzymology , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Glyphosate
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