SETI public: Fw: Physics News Update 627

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Fri Mar 07 2003 - 13:22:34 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: physnews_at_aip.org
    Sent: Friday, March 07, 2003 4:21 PM
    To: ljk4_at_MSN.COM
    Subject: Physics News Update 627

    PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE
    The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News
    Number 627 March 7, 2003 by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein, and James
    Riordon

    MICROFLUIDICS is a traffic control system for sampling, sorting, and mixing
    mesocopic objects. The objects are often biological---cells, proteins,
    chromosomes in a solvent---and the platform is often a lithographically
    patterned chip on which fluids are urged through microchannels using volts,
    heat, or even peristaltic pressure. Microfluidics was a large topic at this
    week's March Meeting of the American Physical Society (APS) in Austin, Texas
    (http://www.aps.org/meet/MAR03/baps/index.html ). Here are some
    highlights.
    Carl Hansen (Caltech) described a device with the largest degree of
    integration yet achieved: a chip with 1000 250-picoliter chambers with
    attendant valves for controlling flow and mixing (see also Science, 18
    October 2002). Another device in the Caltech lab of Stephen Quake allows
    the careful metering of reagents in order to facilitate protein
    crystallization under a variety of conditions (pH, viscosity, surface
    tension, 48 different solvents, etc.) on a huge scale (144 parallel
    reactions can take place) and with a minimum of means---only 10 nl of
    precious protein samples are needed, 100 times less than with usual methods
    (see also Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 24 Dec 2002). In this way, many proteins
    have been turned into crystals, often in the space of hours rather than
    days. Indeed some protein species were crystallized for the first time.
    The crystals can then be bombarded with x rays in order to determine
    molecular structure.
    David Grier (Univ. Chicago) reported on a method called holographic optical
    tweezers, in which a beam of laser light, sent into a hologram, is divided
    into a myriad of sub-beams which can independently suspend and manipulate
    numerous tiny objects for possible transportation, mixing, or reacting.
    Grier showed movies of ensembles of micro-spheres moved into patterns and
    even set to spinning by the holographically sculpted light fields. Applied
    to fluid samples of biomolecules, the holographic multiplexing produces what
    Grier calls "optical fractionation," an optical equivalent of gel
    electrophoresis, in which electric fields are used differentially to drive
    and separate macromolecules. In the flexible Chicago approach, there is no
    viscous gel, and a deft change in the computer-generated hologram or the
    laser wavelength can quickly bring about sorting of objects ranging from the
    100-nm size (viruses) up to the 100-micron size scale.
    Meanwhile, Jochen Guck (Univ. Leipzig) subjects fluid-borne cells to a pair
    of laser beams which stretch the cells and probe their elasticity. In
    general sick cells are softer (by a factor of 2 to 10) than healthy cells.
    In this way, Guck's "optical stretcher" can "feel" the difference between
    normal and abnormal at a rate of hundreds of cells per hour, compared to
    typical rates of 10 cells per day using other elasticity-measuring methods,
    thus reducing the need for biopsies requiring larger tissue samples. The
    Leipzig device might even be able to tell the difference between ordinary
    cancerous cells from the even softer metastasizing-capable cells.

    THE SEARCH FOR AN RNA "EVE," a hypothetical ancestor of some or all of the
    types of RNA now known, might be possible using a technique pioneered by
    scientists at MIT's Whitehead Institute. Just as DNA samples are used by
    paleo-anthropologists to study the spread of humans to different part of the
    world, and by evolutionary biologists to study connections among various
    lineages on the tree of living organisms, so too there might be ways of
    studying the origins of RNA, or at least the relation between RNA foldedness
    and biochemical function. Unlike DNA, its double-stranded cousin, RNA
    starts out single-stranded, but can at many places along its length double
    over on itself to arrive at complicated, twisted shapes.
    Speaking at the APS March Meeting, Erik Schultes (MIT-Whitehead) reported
    on an experiment in which a particular sequence of RNA bases could, by
    altering one base at a time, take on rather quickly the identity of either
    of two very different ribozymes (RNA molecules that can catalyze reactions)
    with two very different functions, one for cleavage and one for ligation.
    Continuing to substitute different bases in a clever way, the researchers
    noticed that they could retain the functionality of the two RNA species
    (that is, the ribozymes went on performing their cleavage or ligation jobs)
    even though the two were getting progressively further apart in "sequence
    space." At the end one could look at the two contrasting ribozymes, with
    different function and very different sequences, and hardly suspect that
    they had a common origin. Schultes (schultes_at_wi.mit.edu) compared this to
    transforming the word cat into the word dog through a sequence of
    single-letter "mutations," each one of which resulted in a legitimate word:
    cat-cot-cog-dog (for background see Science, 21 July 2000).
    At the same RNA session Ranjan Mukhopadhyay (ranjan_at_research.nj.nec.com)
    reported that he and his colleagues at NEC Laboratories in New Jersey have
    found that a typical RNA sequence with its 4-base chemical code folds more
    predictably and stably than would hypothetical RNA sequences based on a
    two-base or six-base "alphabet. Both 4-base and 6-base RNA proved to be
    more stable than 2-base RNA. Furthermore, 4-base RNA possessed more stable,
    foldable structures than 6-base RNA (just as it is easier to form 4-letter
    Scrabble words than it is to form 6-letter words).
    In other theoretical work, Ralf Bundschuh of Ohio State
    (bundschuh_at_mps.ohio-state.edu) and Terence Hwa of UC-San Diego have
    showed that RNA could exhibit several different "phases," just as water can
    exist on a pressure-versus-temperature phase diagram in the solid, gaseous,
    or liquid forms. In the case of RNA, Bundschuh showed mathematically, RNA
    could exist in a normal, glassy, molten, or denatured phase. At low
    temperatures, for instance, in the "glassy" phase, a given RNA sequence can
    get stuck in a random structure. At higher temperatures, RNA can assume a
    more flexible molten state, in which it is free to fold into a variety of
    different shapes.

    ***********
    PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE is a digest of physics news items arising
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